How Diet Leads to Defensive Dynamism: Effect of the Dietary Quality on Autogenous Alkaloid Recovery Rate in a Chemically Defended Beetle

Zowi Oudendijk*, John J. Sloggett

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

44 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

The impact of different diets on chemical defense has been extensively studied in animals that sequester defensive chemicals from food. However, there are fewer studies of diet-mediated variation in autogenously produced defenses. Ladybird beetles, which use autogenously synthesized defensive alkaloids, are used as models in a wide diversity of studies of chemical defense, specifically in studies of intraspecific variation in color pattern and chemical defense. Many aphidophagous ladybirds consume a wide diversity of aphid prey, which vary in quality and thus could affect the synthesis of chemical defense. We measured alkaloid recovery rate after reflex bleeding by the ladybird Adalia bipunctata on two different aphid diets, the high quality Acyrthosiphon pisum and the lower quality Aphis fabae. Alkaloids reaccumulated in ladybirds more slowly when they were fed A. fabae than when they were fed A. pisum and females generally had more alkaloid than males, but reaccumulated alkaloid more slowly. Recovery times were more than 12 days. There appeared to be a weak positive relationship between alkaloid level and time since reflex bleeding for eggs of A. pisum- but not A. fabae-fed females. Our findings on diet and alkaloid synthesis in ladybirds suggest that chemical defense levels are very dynamic, indicating that studies conducted at a single point in time, such as those focused on ladybird color pattern, fail to consider a wide diversity of temporal variation that occurs in the field. This is likely true for many autogenously produced chemical defense systems in a diversity of other organisms.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)99-107
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Chemical Ecology
Volume48
Issue number1
Early online date20 Nov 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2022

Keywords

  • Coccinellidae
  • chemical defense
  • Adalia bipunctata
  • dietary generalist
  • adaline
  • ADALIA-BIPUNCTATA COLEOPTERA
  • INTRAGUILD PREDATION
  • LADYBIRD
  • COCCINELLIDAE
  • GENERALIST
  • BIOSYNTHESIS
  • HONESTY
  • SIGNAL
  • COSTS
  • EGGS

Cite this