Detritivorous crustaceans become herbivores on jasmonate-deficient plants
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Communicated by James H. Tumlinson III, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, December 2, 2008 (received for review July 12, 2008)
Abstract
The jasmonate signal pathway is known to control defenses against herbivores, such as leaf eaters (folivores). Does the reach of the pathway extend to defense against other types of animal? Among the arthropods attracted to seed baits placed below flowering Arabidopsis thaliana plants are 2 largely nocturnal isopod crustaceans generally considered as detritivores: Porcellio scaber and Armadillidium vulgare. Parallel laboratory experiments identified the isopods as being capable of predation on intact plants. Isopod feeding was strongly facilitated in jasmonate-deficient Arabidopsis and rice plants. The feeding activity of isopods revealed potentially detritivore-sensitive, jasmonate-protected Achilles' heels in these architecturally different plants (petioles and inflorescence stems in Arabidopsis, and lower stem and mesocotyl in rice). The work addresses the question of what stops 2 detritivores from attacking living plants and provides evidence that it is, in part, the jasmonate signal pathway. Furthermore, senescent leaves from an Arabidopsis jasmonate mutant were consumed more rapidly than senescent wild-type leaves, suggesting that past activity of the jasmonate signal pathway in leaves may slow carbon recycling through detritivory.
Footnotes
- 1To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: edward.farmer{at}unil.ch
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Author contributions: E.E.F. designed research; E.E.F. and L.D. performed research; E.E.F. and L.D. analyzed data; and E.E.F. and L.D. wrote the paper.
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The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- © 2009 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA










