Publication | Open Access
Decoding neighbour volatiles in preparation for future competition and implications for tritrophic interactions
66
Citations
79
References
2016
Year
EngineeringBotanyVolatile InteractionsChemistryVolatile ElementTritrophic InteractionsVolatile SignalsFuture CompetitionPlant Volatile SignalsCarbon SequestrationBiogeochemistryNeighbour VolatilesPlant-insect InteractionPest ManagementBiologyPlant-parasite CoevolutionNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyInduced ResistancePlant-animal InteractionBiogeochemical ProcessBiotic InteractionPlant Physiology
Plant volatile signals can provide important information about the physiological status and genetic identity of the emitter, and nearby plants can use this information to detect competitive neighbours. The novelty of these signals is that plants eavesdropping to volatiles of undamaged neighbours respond with typical competition responses, even before competition takes place, initiating specific growth responses that can increase their competitive capacity. This preparing for future competition mechanism affects the behaviour and abundance of herbivore pests and their natural enemies. Previously, such responses were only known to occur in response to volatiles released by damaged plants. However, volatile interactions occur only in specific combination of species/genotypes, indicating that plants use volatile signals in the detection and adaption only to substantial competitive neighbours.
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