Interactions of elevated carbon dioxide and temperature with aphid feeding on transgenic oilseed rape: are Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) plants more susceptible to nontarget herbivores in future climate?
Interactions of elevated carbon dioxide and temperature with aphid feeding on transgenic oilseed rape: are Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) plants more susceptible to nontarget herbivores in future climate?
Climate change factors such as elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) and temperature typically affect carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) dynamics of crop plants and the performance of insect herbivores. Insect-resistant transgenic plants invest some nutrients to the production of specific toxic proteins [i.e. endotoxins from Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt)], which could alter the C–N balance of these plants, especially under changed abiotic conditions. Aphids are nonsusceptible to Lepidoptera-targeted Bt Cry1Ac toxin and they typically show response to abiotic conditions, and here we sought to discover whether they might perform differently on compositionally changed Bt oilseed rape. Bt oilseed rape had increased N content in the leaves coupled with reduced total C compared with its nontransgenic counterpart, but in general the C : N responses of both plant types to elevated CO2 and temperature were similar. Elevated CO2 decreased N content and increased C : N ratio of both plant types. Elevated temperature increased C and N contents, total chlorophyll and carotenoid concentrations under ambient CO2, but decreased these under elevated CO2. In addition, soluble sugars were increased and starch decreased by elevated temperature under ambient but not under elevated CO2, whereas photosynthesis was decreased in plants grown under elevated temperature in both CO2 levels. Myzus persicae, a generalist aphid species, responded directly to elevated temperature with reduced developmental time and decreased adult and progeny weights, whereas the development of the Brassica specialist Brevicoryne brassicae was less affected. Feeding by M. persicae resulted in an increase in the N content of oilseed rape leaves under ambient CO2, indicating the potential of herbivore feeding itself to cause allocation changes. The aphids performed equally well on both plant types despite the differences between C–N ratios of Bt and non-Bt oilseed rape, revealing the absence of plant composition-related effects on these pests under elevated CO2, elevated temperature or combined elevated CO2 and temperature conditions.
aphids, bacillus thuringiensis, brassica napus, brevicoryne brassicae, climate change, elevated CO2, elevated temperature, myzus persicae, transgenic plants
1437-1454
Himanen, Sari J.
77f1198d-2b1f-4ed9-a5ad-12cc0864ce2b
Nissinen, Anne
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Dong, Wen-Xia
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Nerg, Anne-Marja
a27252ac-184e-4bb8-9b75-2a4f99c4cda0
Stewart, C. Neal
38a51ac2-05bb-48b8-9109-b17b07c384b3
Poppy, Guy M.
e18524cf-10ae-4ab4-b50c-e73e7d841389
Holopainen, Jarmo K.
521dbaf2-663f-4863-b7f9-302b13465c68
June 2008
Himanen, Sari J.
77f1198d-2b1f-4ed9-a5ad-12cc0864ce2b
Nissinen, Anne
23302a1e-873d-4ffd-a3a1-cb56a7dcb072
Dong, Wen-Xia
9a0fdcae-f3ea-4ebe-b4b7-7e3bfc115113
Nerg, Anne-Marja
a27252ac-184e-4bb8-9b75-2a4f99c4cda0
Stewart, C. Neal
38a51ac2-05bb-48b8-9109-b17b07c384b3
Poppy, Guy M.
e18524cf-10ae-4ab4-b50c-e73e7d841389
Holopainen, Jarmo K.
521dbaf2-663f-4863-b7f9-302b13465c68
Himanen, Sari J., Nissinen, Anne, Dong, Wen-Xia, Nerg, Anne-Marja, Stewart, C. Neal, Poppy, Guy M. and Holopainen, Jarmo K.
(2008)
Interactions of elevated carbon dioxide and temperature with aphid feeding on transgenic oilseed rape: are Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) plants more susceptible to nontarget herbivores in future climate?
Global Change Biology, 14 (6), .
(doi:10.1111/j.1365-2486.2008.01574.x).
Abstract
Climate change factors such as elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) and temperature typically affect carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) dynamics of crop plants and the performance of insect herbivores. Insect-resistant transgenic plants invest some nutrients to the production of specific toxic proteins [i.e. endotoxins from Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt)], which could alter the C–N balance of these plants, especially under changed abiotic conditions. Aphids are nonsusceptible to Lepidoptera-targeted Bt Cry1Ac toxin and they typically show response to abiotic conditions, and here we sought to discover whether they might perform differently on compositionally changed Bt oilseed rape. Bt oilseed rape had increased N content in the leaves coupled with reduced total C compared with its nontransgenic counterpart, but in general the C : N responses of both plant types to elevated CO2 and temperature were similar. Elevated CO2 decreased N content and increased C : N ratio of both plant types. Elevated temperature increased C and N contents, total chlorophyll and carotenoid concentrations under ambient CO2, but decreased these under elevated CO2. In addition, soluble sugars were increased and starch decreased by elevated temperature under ambient but not under elevated CO2, whereas photosynthesis was decreased in plants grown under elevated temperature in both CO2 levels. Myzus persicae, a generalist aphid species, responded directly to elevated temperature with reduced developmental time and decreased adult and progeny weights, whereas the development of the Brassica specialist Brevicoryne brassicae was less affected. Feeding by M. persicae resulted in an increase in the N content of oilseed rape leaves under ambient CO2, indicating the potential of herbivore feeding itself to cause allocation changes. The aphids performed equally well on both plant types despite the differences between C–N ratios of Bt and non-Bt oilseed rape, revealing the absence of plant composition-related effects on these pests under elevated CO2, elevated temperature or combined elevated CO2 and temperature conditions.
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Published date: June 2008
Keywords:
aphids, bacillus thuringiensis, brassica napus, brevicoryne brassicae, climate change, elevated CO2, elevated temperature, myzus persicae, transgenic plants
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Local EPrints ID: 155399
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/155399
ISSN: 1354-1013
PURE UUID: 0863e231-a769-4ba4-85ee-3e1d3134a90e
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Date deposited: 27 May 2010 14:31
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 01:38
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Author:
Sari J. Himanen
Author:
Anne Nissinen
Author:
Wen-Xia Dong
Author:
Anne-Marja Nerg
Author:
C. Neal Stewart
Author:
Jarmo K. Holopainen
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