A caterpillar of the evening primrose moth (Schinia florida)
devouring a flower bud of common evening primrose (Oenothera biennis).
These moths exclusively feed on the flowers and fruits of evening
primrose and in response to natural selection imposed by this and other
specialist moths, evening primrose populations evolve to flower later
and to produce high levels of toxic chemicals called ellagitannins in
their fruits. This evolution effectively reduces damage of the plant’s
reproductive organs and progeny.
(Oct. 4, 2012) — Take a good look around on
your next nature hike. Not only are you experiencing the wonders of the
outdoors -- you're probably also witnessing evolution in action.
New research from the University of Toronto Mississauga (UTM) on the
effect of insects on plant populations has shown that evolution can
happen more quickly than was previously assumed, even over a single
generation. The study is to be published in the Oct. 5 issue of Science.
"Scientists have long hypothesized that the interaction between
plants and insects has led to much of the diversity we see among plants,
including crops, but until now we had limited direct experimental
evidence," says Marc Johnson, Assistant Professor in the UTM Department
of Biology. "This research fills a fundamental gap in our understanding
of how natural selection by insects causes evolutionary changes in
plants as they adapt, and demonstrates how rapidly these changes can
happen in nature."
Johnson and his collaborators from Cornell University, University of
Montana and University of Turku in Finland, planted evening primrose, a
typically self-fertilizing plant with genetically identical offspring,
in two sets of plots. Each plot initially contained 60 plants of 18
different genotypes (plants that contain different sets of mutations).
To test whether insects drive the evolution of plant defenses, one
set of plots was kept free of insects with a regular biweekly
application of insecticide over the entire study period. The other set
of plots received natural levels of insects.
The plots were left to grow without other interference for five
years. Each year, Johnson and his collaborators counted the number and
types of plants colonizing the plots. They also analyzed the changing
frequencies of the different evening primrose genotypes and the traits
associated with these genotypes.
Johnson says that evolution, which is simply a change in genotype
frequency over time, was observed in all plots after only a single
generation. Plant populations began to diverge significantly in response
to insect attack in as few as three to four generations. For instance,
plants that were not treated with insecticide had increases in the
frequencies of genotypes associated with higher levels of toxic
chemicals in the fruits, which made them unpalatable to seed predator
moths. Plants that flowered later, and thus avoided insect predators,
also increased in frequency.
Johnson says the findings also show that evolution might be an
important mechanism that causes changes in whole ecosystems. "As these
plant populations evolve, their traits change and influence their
interactions with insects and other plant species, which in turn may
evolve adaptations to cope with those changes," says Johnson. "The
abundance and competitiveness of the plant populations is changing.
Evolution can change the ecology and the function of organisms and
entire ecosystems."
Additional ecological changes occurred in the plots when insects were
removed. Competitor plants, such as dandelion, colonized both sets of
plots but were more abundant in plots without insects. This in turn
reduced the number of evening primrose plants. The dandelion used more
resources and also potentially prevented light from reaching the evening
primrose seeds, impacting seed germination. According to Johnson, these
ecological changes were the result of the suppression of a moth
caterpillar that preferred to feed on dandelion.
"What this research shows is that changes in these plant populations
were not the result of genetic drift, but directly due to natural
selection by insects on plants," says Johnson. "It also demonstrates how
rapidly evolutionary change can occur -- not over millennia, but over
years, and all around us."
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