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Plant toxin levels in nectar vary spatially across native and introduced populations

Lookup NU author(s): Professor Geraldine Wright

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Abstract

Secondary compounds in nectar can function as toxic chemical defences against floral antagonists, but may also mediate plant-pollinator interactions. Despite their ecological importance, few studies have investigated patterns of spatial variation in toxic nectar compounds in plant species, and none outside their native range. Grayanotoxin I (GTX I) occurs in nectar of invasive Rhododendron ponticum where it is toxic to honeybees and some solitary bee species. We examined (i) geographic variation in the composition of nectar GTX I, as well as GTX III (which is not toxic to these species), in the native and introduced range of R.ponticum, (ii) how their expression is structured at patch and landscape scales within ranges, and (iii) whether climatic and environmental factors underpin spatial patterns. While both GTXs varied within ranges, variation in GTX I, but not GTX III, was detected between ranges. GTX I expression was thus markedly lower or (in 18% of cases) absent from nectar in introduced plants. Spatial autocorrelation was apparent at both patch and landscape scales and in part related to heat load interception by plants (a function of latitude, aspect and slope). As expression of nectar GTXs was generally robust to environmental variation, and aggregated in space, this trait has the potential to be spatially discriminated by consumers. Given the specificity of change to GTX I, and its differential toxicity to some bee species, we conclude that its expression was likely to have been influenced during invasion by interaction with herbivores/consumers, either via pollinator-mediated selection or enemy release from floral antagonists.Synthesis. As the first demonstration of large-scale geographic variation and spatial structure in toxic nectar compounds, this work deepens our understanding of the chemical ecology of floral interactions in native and introduced species. Spatially explicit studies of nectar secondary compounds are thus required to show how the extent and structure of spatial variation may affect floral ecology. Future development of invasion theory should incorporate a holistic view of plant defence, beyond antagonistic interactions, which integrates the consequences of chemically defended mutualist rewards.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Egan PA, Stevenson PC, Tiedeken EJ, Wright GA, Boylan F, Stout JC

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: Journal of Ecology

Year: 2016

Volume: 104

Issue: 4

Pages: 1106-1115

Print publication date: 01/07/2016

Online publication date: 27/04/2016

Acceptance date: 10/03/2016

ISSN (print): 0022-0477

ISSN (electronic): 1365-2745

Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell

URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.12573

DOI: 10.1111/1365-2745.12573


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Funding

Funder referenceFunder name
BBSRC
NERC
Defra
Wellcome Trust
10/RFP/EOB2842Science Foundation Ireland
BB/I000143/1Scottish Government under the Insect Pollinators Initiative
RS/2010/2147Irish Research Council

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