Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/98207
Title: Limits to the adaptation of herbivorous spider mites to metal accumulation in homogeneous and heterogeneous environments
Author: Godinho, Diogo P.
De mendonça fragata almeida, Inês
Majer, Agnieszka
Rodrigues, Leonor R
Magalhães, Sara
Issue Date: Jun-2024
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Citation: Diogo P Godinho, Inês Fragata, Agnieszka Majer, Leonor R Rodrigues, Sara Magalhães, Limits to the adaptation of herbivorous spider mites to metal accumulation in homogeneous and heterogeneous environments, Journal of Evolutionary Biology, Volume 37, Issue 6, June 2024, Pages 631–641, https://doi.org/10.1093/jeb/voae003
Abstract: Metal accumulation is used by some plants as a defence against herbivores. Yet, herbivores may adapt to these defences, becoming less susceptible. Moreover, ecosystems often contain plants that do and do not accumulate metals, but whether such heterogeneity affects herbivore adaptation remains understudied. Here, we performed experimental evolution to test whether the spider mite Tetranychus evansi adapts to plants with high cadmium concentrations, in homogeneous (plants with cadmium) or heterogeneous (plants with or without cadmium) environments. For that we used tomato plants, which accumulate cadmium, thus affecting the performance of these spider mites. We measured mite fecundity, hatching rate, and the number of adult offspring after 12 and 33 generations and habitat choice after 14 and 51 generations, detecting no trait change, which implies the absence of adaptation. We then tested whether this was due to a lack of genetic variation in the traits measured and, indeed, additive genetic variance was low. Interestingly, despite no signs of adaptation, we observed a decrease in fecundity and number of adult offspring produced on cadmium-free plants, in the populations evolving in environments with cadmium. Therefore, evolving in environments with cadmium reduces the growth rate of spider mite populations on non-accumulating plants. Possibly, other traits contributed to population persistence on plants with cadmium. This calls for more studies addressing herbivore adaptation to plant metal accumulation.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/98207
DOI: 10.1093/jeb/voae003
Appears in Collections:cE3c - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais

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