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Coevolution: Evolutionary Interactions Between Herbivorous Insects and Plants

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Title: Coevolution: Evolutionary Interactions Between Herbivorous Insects and Plants


1
Coevolution Evolutionary Interactions Between
Herbivorous Insects and Plants
  • Peter B. McEvoy
  • Ent 420/520 Insect Ecology

2
Questions (Futyma and Slatkin 1983)
  • Adaptive Radiation. How often has the adaptive
    radiation of a group depended on radiation of
    other groups with which they interact?
  • Speciation. Does speciation of hosts and parasite
    often occur in parallel?
  • Defense. Do defense systems of prey become more
    complex over evolutionary time with addition of
    new defenses to the armory, or are old defenses
    traded in for new ones?
  • Specialization, Virulence-resistance. Do
    parasites tend toward specialization or toward
    benign or even mutualistic relationship with
    their hosts?
  • Nature and power of historical explanation. In
    general, how much of the history of evolution
    must be explained in terms of the evolutionary
    effects of interspecific interactions?

3
Evolution of Insect-plant Relationships
  • Plant effects on insects. Do plants exert
    selection pressure on the insects?
  • Insect effects on plants. Do insects exert
    selection pressure on the plants?
  • Symmetry. Are the selective interactions between
    insects and plant reciprocal?
  • Do related insects feed on related hosts?
  • Is specialization an evolutionary dead end?

4
Alternative Theories on Herbivore-Plant Evolution
  • Coevolution (Ehrlich and Raven 1964)
  • Diffuse Coevolution, Community Coevolution (Fox
    1988)
  • Geographic Mosaic Theory of Coevolution (Thompson
    1994, 2005)
  • Sequential Evolution (Jermy 1976, 1984, 1991)

5
Escape and Radiation Coevolution Hypothesis
(Ehrlich and Raven)
  • Many factors influence the evolution of
    herbivorous diets, but plant chemistry is central
  • Secondary chemicals produced by chance and
    modified under selective pressure from herbivores
  • Plant escape and radiation chemically-defended
    plants escape herbivores and radiate
  • Insect escape and radiation counter-adaptations
    by insects allow insects to overcome host
    defenses, exploit previously defended hosts,
    escape competition from other insects, and
    radiate
  • Parallel diversification in insects and plants
    Insects and plants augment one anothers
    diversity through coevolution, reciprocal
    evolutionary change in interacting species

6
Critique of Coevolution (Schoonhoven et al. 1998)
  • Allelochemicals. Same secondary plant compound
    may have different functions in different insects
    toxic, deterrent, attractant negative,
    neutral, positive
  • Plant defense and radiation. Little evidence that
    plants have evolved defenses under herbivore
    selective pressure or that such plants could
    diversify more effectively because they were
    defended
  • Insect offense and radiation. Processes of
    speciation currently known do not support
    hypothesized radiation since interspecific
    competition generally weak
  • Reciprocal speciation rarely found except in
    pollinators and plants, microbial symbionts and
    their hosts. Related insects often feed on
    unrelated hosts.

7
No single factor drives insects to specialize
  • Escape from interspecific competition
  • Reduced exposure to predators (enemy escape)
  • Increased efficiency at detoxifying plant
    allelochemicals
  • Genetically based trade-offs in offspring
    performance
  • Increased efficiency in host finding

8
No clear link between chemistry and speciation
  • Spatial barriers
  • Behavioral barriers
  • Asynchrony in life history
  • Hybrid incompatibility

Speciation
Reproductive isolation
Chemistry
9
Asynchrony in Emergence of Three Apple Maggot
RacesChanges in preference and performance
conserved by temporal separation of host races
and assortative mating
10
Oviposition Preferences of Euphydryas editha
Changed as ancestral host decreased and novel
host increased
Novel Host increased
Ancestral Host decreased
11
Geographic Mosaic Theory (Thompson) recognizes
the importance of spatial heterogeneity and
movement Why retain the concept of
coevolution?
  • Local variation in environment and population and
    community structure
  • Local variation in outcome of interactions and
    specialization
  • Balance between gene flow and selection
  • Results in a shifting, geographic mosaic of
    interaction that need not result in a simple
    escalation of adaptations and counter-adaptations

12
Sequential or Asymmetrical Evolution Theory
(Jermy)
  • Sequence of events. Evolution of insects follows
    the evolution of plants without significantly
    affecting plant evolution
  • Interaction strength. Plants exert strong
    selective pressure on insects, whereas reciprocal
    negative effect of insects on plants is rare and
    weak
  • Speciation in insects may be mediated by plants,
    but speciation in plants unrelated to insects
  • Origin of plant traits. Switches in host occur,
    but no evidence that acquisition of new host has
    changed the traits of a plant

13
Tree of Plants
ucjeps.berkeley.edu/TreeofLife/hyperbolic.php
14
Chronology of Plant and Insect Evolution (Smart
and Hughes 1972)
  • Potential resources
  • Increased stature up-standing plants ?
    overtopping ? trees
  • Appearance of Vasculature (Cordaites)
  • Appearance of seeds (spores ?terminal sporangia
    ?terminal spike ?heterosporous condition ?seeds)
  • Leaves microphylls ? megaphylls ? laminate
    leaves ? insect damaged leaves
  • Flowers and fruits
  • Species - diversification of Angiosperms toward
    end of early Cretaceous
  • Modes of exploitation - Sucking probably earliest
    mode of feeding, followed by chewing, while
    mining and galling appear much later

15
More Plant Species ? More Insects Species
Higher Plant Species Diversity ? More Insects
Species
16
More Plant Architectural Diversity ? More Insect
Species
Number of phytophage species S increases with
area of host For a given host area, the number
of phytophage species increases with the
architectural diversity of the host plant (e.g.
we find progressively fewer phytophages on trees,
shrubs, herbs)
17
Diversities of Fossil Families Within Insect
Orders of Phanerozoic (Labandeira et al 1993)
Angiosperms appear 2/3 of the way up the band of
Mesozoic, radiate extensively in Cenozoic
(Tertiary) Possibly accelerated Hym, Lep, Dip,
Col No such effect on Orthop, Homop,
Heterop Insect diversification depends on
intrinsic trends rather than environmental
(ecological) conditions
18
Insect Familial Diversity From Triassic to Present
Overall, appearance and ascendancy of the
angiosperms associated with a slow-down rather
than an acceleration of insect familial
diversification Caveat family diversification
not necessarily identical with species
diversification
19
Summary From Fossil Evidence
  • Timing of events. No precise coincidence in time
    between evolution of higher plants and insect
    taxa. Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, Diptera,
    Coleoptera radiations may have accelerated with
    appearance and radiation of angiosperms
  • Expanding resources. An increase in plant
    structural and architectural diversity, plant
    taxonomic diversity, opens up new possibilities
    for insect diversification.

20
Phylogenetic Evidence
  • Host records - field and literature surveys
  • Phylogenies (plant and insect) are constructed
    based on morphological, secondary chemical,
    molecular, and other characters
  • Patterns - inferences about the predictability
    and stability of the host range
  • Pattern 1 Taxonomically related insects feed on
    taxonomically related hosts
  • Pattern 2 Parallel evolution of insects and
    plants (Coevolution)
  • Pattern 3 Non-Parallel evolution of insects and
    plants

21
Phylogenetic Patterns 2Parallel evolution of
insects and plants (Coevolution)
22
Phylogenetic patterns 3 Non-Parallel evolution
of insects and plants
23
Phylogenetic Analysis Sample of 25 insect-plant
associations (Mitter and Farrell 1991, Farrell
et al. 1992, Farrell and Mitter 1993, Futuyma and
Mitter 1997)
  • Taxonomic similarity. Shifts among plant
    families are relatively rare, but shifts within
    plant families are relatively common
  • Ancient origin. Conservative plant-insect
    associations are probably very old, from about 70
    to 100 million years old
  • Seldom evolve by strict coevolution. The
    exception, rather than the rule, is finding close
    concordance in insect and plant phylogenies
    matching different insect species with different
    plant species in a tight coevolutionary relation,
    but broad concordance is found higher in the
    taxonomic hierarchy
  • Similar hosts in different regions. Similar host
    ranges are revealed by comparing related insects
    in different biogeographic regions, another
    indication that that diets are phylogenetically
    conservative
  • Chemical similarity. Some host ranges are
    conservative with respect to phytochemistry

24
Challenges to Conventional Wisdom
  • Phylogenetically conserved mechanisms. Host use
    is not necessarily phylogenetically
    conservative taxonomically related insects may
    feed on taxonomically unrelated plants
  • Origins and Potentials of specialists.
    Specialization is not necessarily derived
    both primitive and derived taxa may specialize,
    and specialization need not be an evolutionary
    dead end

25
Plant coumarins, Swallowtails, and Other Insects
An Example of a Coevolved System (Berenbaum)
  • Diet phylogenies of several herbivore clades
    using taxonomically disparate hosts may be
    interpretable as conserved associations with
    coumarin-bearing plants
  • Escalation of defense
  • Radiation of plants
  • Radiation of insects

26
Parsnip Moth Depressaria pastinacella
Parsnip Moth Depressaria pastinacella
Heracleum sphondylium
27
Coumarins Vary From Simple to Complexin
Escalating Plant Defense
30 plant families
8 plant families
2 plant families Fabaceae (2) Apiaceae (11)
28
PLANT DIVERSITY More Extensive Radiation by
Plants With More Complex furanocoumarins
29
INSECT DIVERSITY More Extensive Radiation in
Insects Associated With Plants Having More
Complex Coumarins
30
Greater Degree of Specialization Among Insects
Feeding on Plants With More Complex Coumarins
31
Genetics
  • Genetic basis for chemical variation among
    individual wild parsnip plants Pastinaca sativa
    attacked by the parsnip webworm Depressaria
    pastinacella (Oecophoridae)
  • Nature of inheritance for plant resistance.
    Quantitative and polygenic resistance
  • Negative correlations in resistance traits of the
    plant. Negative correlation between two traits
    (bergapten and sphondin) conveying resistance
    limits resistance in the plant population when
    herbivore present
  • Costs of defense for plant. Negative correlation
    between several resistance factors and total seed
    production in greenhouse where herbivore is
    absent.
  • Lingering Questions Are there similar genetic
    constraints on response of insect to selection by
    plant chemistry? Polygenic control of
    resistance-breaking ability? Negative
    correlations in traits conferring resistance
    breaking ability?

32
Overall Summary
  • Adapative hurdles. Feeding on plants presents
    formidable hurdles to insects, but once hurdles
    are cleared, radiation may be dramatic
  • Coevolution. Evolutionary interactions between
    insects and plants have been described as
    coevolution, but strict reciprocity has not been
    demonstrated for any complex of plants and
    herbivores. This has spawned alternative
    theories.
  • Coevolution is more likely to occur when an
    insect has few host species and its hosts harbor
    few natural enemies.

33
Parsnip Webworm interaction
Pastinaca sativa or parsnip introduced to NA
almost 400 yrs ago Heracleum lanatum or cow
parsnip is an alternate host
Parsnip Pastinaca sativa
Heracleum sphondylium
Parsnip Moth Depressaria pastinacella
reassociated with parsnip in mid 19th
century Larvae attack seeds
CalPhotos
34
Geographic Mosaic Hypothesis(Thompson 1994,
1999, 2005)
  • Outcomes of interspecific interactions can vary
    among populations due to structural differences
    in the communities in which interactions are
    embedded
  • Where selection intensity is great, reciprocal
    responses are likely in so-called hotspots
  • In contrast, where selection pressures are
    relaxed, reciprocal responses in coldspots are
    far less likely to occur

35
Geographic Variation in Outcomes has been
Reported for
  • Plants and Pathogens
  • Hosts and Parasites
  • Hosts and Parasitoids
  • Competitors
  • Pollinators or floral parasites and plants
  • Herbivores and plants
  • Coevolutionary changes in chemical defense have
    rarely been examined in this context

36
Department of EntomologyUniversity of Illinois
May R. Berenbaum
Arthur R. Zangerl
37
(No Transcript)
38
A Model System
  • Plate 1. Clockwise from left wild parsnip
    damaged by parsnip webworm in The Netherlands,
    parsnip webworm in the United States, and
    prepupal parsnip webworm parasitized by
    Copidosoma sosares in The Netherlands. Photo
    credits A. Zangerl Copidosoma Sosares (Walker)
    (Hymenoptera Encyrtidae)

39
Evidence of hot spots and cold spotsPhenotype
matching between plant furanocoumarin profile and
insect detoxification profile
  • Credentials of the sample. Four populations of
    webworms and wild parsnips in the midwestern
    United States
  • Operational definitions of resistance and
    virulence. Evaluated correspondence between
    resistance in the wild parsnip populations
    (capacity to produce furanocoumarins) with
    virulence (capacity to detoxify
    furanocoumarins) in each webworm population
  • Resistance factors. Four furanocoumarins known
    to influence the interaction between webworms and
    parsnips - bergapten, isopimpinellin,
    xanthotoxin, and sphondinwere quantified in the
    seeds of wild parsnips and, as well, rates of
    metabolism of these four furanocoumarins were
    quantified in the associated insect populations

40
How does interaction strength vary with community
structure?
  • Interaction with natural enemies and alternative
    host plants can reduce the intensity of
    coevolutionary interaction between webworms and
    parsnips
  • Many of the models of coevolutionary dynamics are
    based on two-species interactions and relatively
    few empirical studies involve multispecies
    interactions
  • Restated diagrammatically as follows

41
Expected Effects of Varying Community Structure
Parasitoid
Herbivore
Plant
Plant
Coevolutionary Temperature Expectation
--- Cold Spots ---
Hot Spot
H-P Well-Matched
H-P Mismatched
42
Hypotheses
  • Outcomes of interaction between the wild parsnip
    and the parsnip webworm, compared at home (area
    of indigeneity) and abroad (area of introduction)
  • If webworms act as selective agents on
    furanocoumarin content of hosts, they will likely
  • Avoid or fail to utilize plants with
    furanocoumarin profiles that confer resistance
  • Thrive on plants with furanocoumarin profiles
    that are insufficient to confer resistance.
  • The selective impact of the parsnip webworm on
    the wild parsnip is likely reduced by
  • alternate, chemically different host plants
  • a specialist parasitoid natural enemy that
    inflicts significant mortality
  • Leading to an absence of a predictive
    relationship between webworm presence and host
    plant chemical composition

43
Methods
  • Pastinaca sativa and Heracleum spp. surveyed in
    Europe during only one year 2003 ignores
    temporal variation (within and between years) at
    each location i.e. sample long on space, short
    on time
  • Counted parasitized and unparasitized webworms
    with what probability of detection?
  • Strength of interactions interaction
    temperature classified as categorical variable,
    cold or hot, depending on whether webworms were
    prevalent or rare a cursory measure of
    interaction strength
  • Webworms collected to test detoxification
    capacity
  • Five furanocoumarins measured in seeds of P.
    sativa collected in USA and EU in 2004 (damage
    also recorded). Compared furanocoumarin seed
    concentrations as a function of continent and
    interaction temperature.
  • In Europe 4 of 14 (30)populations were cold and
    in the United States, 3 of 9 (33) populations
    were cold so frequency of hot and cold sites
    similar between continents

44
Results to be examined
  • Surveys of webworms and parasitoids in European
    populations of P. sativa and H. sphondylium
  • Furanocoumarin detoxification capacity of
    European and midwestern U.S. populations of
    parsnip webworms
  • Differences in seed furanocoumarin content
    between European host plants
  • Evidence for selection by webworms on
    furanocoumarin chemistry of European host plants
  • Differences between hot and cold regions within
    continents and not between continents in seed
    furanocoumarin content

45
Surveys of webworms in EU
hot
  • Parsnip webworm infestation levels in European
    populations generally higher for Heracleum
    sphondylium (black circles) than Pastinaca sativa
    (gray circles) in 2003

cold
Surveys of parasitoids less conclusive
46
Detoxification ability of webworms lower at home
(Neth) than abroad (Midw)
indicate magnitudes of differences
  • Fig. 4. Least-square means and standard errors of
    furanocoumarin detoxification rates for
    midwestern U.S. and Netherlands populations of
    parsnip webworms. Percentages above bars indicate
    magnitudes of significant differences between
    continents based on a mixed/nested ANOVA
    (continent was a fixed effect, and population was
    a random effect nested within continent). For
    imperatorin, bergapten, isopimpinellin,
    xanthotoxin, and sphondin, P values for the main
    effect of continent were 0.004, 0.031, 0.049,
    0.021, and 0.033, respectively

47
Chemical profiles differ on two hosts in Europe
indicate magnitudes of differences
  • Fig. 5. Least-square means and standard errors of
    seed furanocoumarin content of Heracleum
    sphondylium and Pastinaca sativa in Europe.
    Percentages above bars indicate magnitudes of
    significant differences between species based on
    a mixed/nested ANOVA (species was a fixed effect,
    and population was a random effect nested within
    species). For imperatorin, bergapten,
    isopimpinellin, and xanthotoxin, P values for the
    main effect of species were lt0.001, 0.012, 0.008,
    0.021, and lt0.0013, respectively. Tests were not
    conducted for sphondin, which was not detected
    (n.d.) in H. sphondylium, or for angelicin, which
    was not detected in P. sativa

48
Evidence of Selection by Webworms on
furanocoumarin chemistry in EU hosts is spotty
  • Three under selection 3 of 11 populations show
    evidence of selection
  • Two hot, one cold. 2 of these 3 had high webworm
    infestations (54 and 56 of plants attacked),
    the other low (8.9)
  • Match within one. In 1 of the 2, plants free of
    webworms had higher xanthotoxin
  • Match within other. In the other, plants without
    webworm damage had higher imperatorin,
    isopimpinellin, and sphondin content

49
Difference in furanocouarin content between hot
and cold regions within continents, but not
between continents
indicate magnitudes of differences
  • Fig. 6. Least-square means and standard errors of
    seed furanocoumarin concentration for wild
    parsnips as a function of prevalence of webworms
    (interaction temperature webworms are rare in
    cold regions and common in hot regions).
    Percentages above bars indicate magnitudes of
    significant differences between hot and cold
    regions based on a mixed/nested ANOVA (continent
    and interaction temperature were fixed effects,
    and population was a random effect nested within
    the main effects)

Continent and Hot/Cold interact in case of
sphondin
50
Conclusions
  • Home and Away Populations Similar. Patterns are
    more reflective of interaction temperature than
    of continental origin
  • Introduced System is Simplified. The ubiquitous
    two-species interaction in North America is in
    fact exceptional in Europe webworms could more
    reliably be found infesting H. sphondylium even
    where P. sativa was available as well.
  • Interactions among three trophic levels. A
    preference for H. sphondylium exists despite the
    comparatively high probability of parasitism
    associated with this host plant and may reflect
    the overall lower furanocoumarin content of H.
    sphondylium

51
Assumptions
  • Phenotypic variation in plants and insects has a
    genetic basis good evidence
  • Webworms influence parsnip fitness and population
    dynamics evidence?
  • Parasitoids influence webworm population dynamics
    - evidence?

52
A Novel Use of Herbarium RecordsIncrease in
toxicity of an invasive plant following
reassociation with its coevolved herbivorePNAS
2005 102 (43)
53
Weevil-Camellia Geographic Mosaic
  • Figure 1. A camellia weevil (Curculio camelliae)
    boring into a Japanese camellia (Camellia
    japonica) fruit, and a cross-section of a
    camellia fruit showing two tunnels excavated by
    the rostrum of adult females. (Photographs
    courtesy of Hirokazu Toju.)

54
Boring success varies in relation to host
pericarp thickness and weevil rostrum length
A Case study involving physical rather than
chemical resistance Toju, H., and T. Sota. 2005.
Imbalance of predator and prey armament
geographic clines in phenotypic interface and
natural selection. American Naturalist 167.
55
Implications for Biological Control
  • Introduced species often escape their coevolved
    competitors and natural enemies
  • Simplification of biological control systems may
    lead to stronger, pairwise interactions between
    herbivore and host plant
  • Simplification may increase the frequency of
    coevolutionary host spots within the geographical
    mosaic
  • Parsnip-Webworm interaction in NA is older than
    the oldest biocontrol interaction in NAwith time
    we may expect to see coevolution in control
    organisms and their hosts, with changes in
    virulence and resistance
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