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Inheritance Of Resistance To Mammalian Herbivores and Of Plant Defensive Chemistry In A <Emphasis Type="Italic">Eucalyptus</Emphasis> Species
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Julianne?M?O’Reilly-WapstraEmail author  Brad?M?Potts  Clare?Mcarthur  Noel?W?Davies  Paul?Tilyard
Affiliation:(1) School of Zoology, CRC for Sustainable Production Forestry, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 5, Hobart, Tasmania, 7001, Australia;(2) School of Plant Science, CRC for Sustainable Production Forestry, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 55, Hobart, 7001, Tasmania, Australia;(3) Central Science Laboratory, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 74, Hobart, 7001, Tasmania, Australia;(4) School of Plant Science, CRC for Sustainable Production Forestry, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 55, Hobart, 7001, Tasmania, Australia;(5) School of Biological Sciences, The University of Sydney, 2006, New South Wales, Australia
Abstract:Hybridization in plants provides an opportunity to investigate the patterns of inheritance of hybrid resistance to herbivores, and of the plant mechanisms conferring this resistance such as plant secondary metabolites. We investigated how inter-race differences in resistance of Eucalyptus globulus to a generalist mammalian herbivore, Trichosurus vulpecula, are inherited in their F1 hybrids. We assessed browsing damage of three-year-old trees in a common environment field trial on four hybrid types of known progeny. The progency were artificial intra-race crosses and reciprocal inter-race F1 hybrids of two geographically distinct populations (races) of E. globulus; north-eastern Tasmania and south-eastern Tasmania. Populations of trees from north-eastern Tasmania are relatively susceptible to browsing by T. vulpecula, while populations from south-eastern Tasmania are more resistant. We assessed the preferences of these trees in a series of paired feeding trials with captive animals to test the field trial results and also investigated the patterns of inheritance of plant secondary metabolites. Our results demonstrated that the phenotypic expression of resistance of the inter-race F1 hybrids supported the additive pattern of inheritance, as these hybrids were intermediate in resistance compared to the pure parental hybrids. The expression of plant secondary metabolites in the F1 hybrids varied among groups of individual compounds. The most common pattern supported was dominance towards one of the parental types. Together, condensed tannins and essential oils appeared to explain the observed patterns of resistance among the four hybrid types. While both chemical groups were inherited in a dominant manner in the inter-race F1 hybrids, the direction of dominance was opposite. Their combined concentration, however, was inherited in an additive manner, consistent with the phenotypic differences in browsing.
Keywords:Trichosurus vulpecula  hybrid  plant secondary metabolites  generalist herbivore  additive inheritance  Eucalyptus globulus  hybridization  Formylated phloroglucinol compounds  tannins  essential oils  1  8-cineole
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