Plant–animal interaction explained
Plant-animal interactions are important pathways for the transfer of energy within ecosystems, where both advantageous and unfavorable interactions support ecosystem health.[1] [2] Plant-animal interactions can take on important ecological functions and manifest in a variety of combinations of favorable and unfavorable associations, for example predation, frugivory and herbivory, parasitism, and mutualism.[3] Without mutualistic relationships, some plants may not be able to complete their life cycles, and the animals may starve due to resource deficiency.[4]
Evolution
The earliest vascular plants initially formed on the planet about 425 million years ago, in the Devonian period of the early Paleozoic era. About every feeding method an animal might employ to consume plants had already been well-developed by the time the first herbivorous insects started consuming ferns during the Carboniferous epoch.[5] In the earliest known antagonistic relationships with plants, insects consume plant pollen and spores.[6] Since 300 million years ago, insects have been known to consume nectar and pollinate flowers. In the Mesozoic, between 200 and 150 million years ago, insects' feeding patterns started to diversify.[7] The evolution of plant defenses to reduce cost and increase resistance to herbivores is a crucial component of the Optimal Defense Hypothesis. In order to deal with the plant's adaptability, the animal likewise evolved counter-adaptations.[8] Over the history of their shared evolution, plants and animals have significantly diverged, in large part because of productive co-evolutionary processes that emerged from antagonistic interactions.[9] [10] Mutualistic interactions between plants and insects have developed and disintegrated over the course of the evolution of angiosperms.[11]
Relationship
Defoliation or root removal caused by herbivory can control or reduce the overall phytomass, but it can also promote species diversity and have an impact on plant dispersion, which in turn controls ecological stability.[12] [13] In mutualistic relationships between pollinators and plants, the former receives food from the latter and in exchange acts as a plant propagation agent and a gene-transfer vector.[14] The intricate web of species-specificity, habitat choice, and coevolution between plants and their pollinators has already been clarified by studies examining the feeding behaviors of pollinators and their interactive role in maintaining ecosystems.[15] True mutualisms also promote development and provide pathogen protection.[16] Plant growth and development are aided by mutualistic interactions between animals and plants, such as those between nematodes and insects.[17]
Types
Predation
Predation is a biological interaction where one organism, the predator, kills and eats another organism, its prey. There are carnivorous plants as well as herbivores and carnivores that consume plants and animals, respectively. Due to the extremely low nutritional content of the soil in which they grow and extra nitrogen is needed by the plants, therefore carnivorous plants eat insects. By photosynthesis, these plants continue to receive energy from the sun.[18]
Parasitism
Parasitism is a close relationship between species, where one organism, the parasite, lives on or inside another organism, the host, causing it some harm, and is adapted structurally to this way of life. Plant parasites are a common term for sap-sucking insects like aphids.[19]
Commensalism
Commensalism is the term used to describe a situation in which one organism gains and the other is neither harmed nor benefited.[20] For instance, epiphytes on tree trunks in rain forests are aided by the trees because they provide a surface for their growth. Unless the epiphytes' weight becomes so great that the tree branches break, the epiphytes don't seem to have any effect on the trees.[21]
Mutualism
When both species gain from their interaction, mutualism develops. The mutualistic link between pollinators and plants is very well illustrated. In this instance, the animal pollinator (bee, butterfly, beetle, hummingbird, etc.) receives nourishment in exchange for carrying the plants' pollen from flower to flower (usually nectar or pollen). Another common method of seed dispersion involves an alliance between the plant and the animal that disperses the seeds. The tasty fruit that encases the seeds is consumed by numerous animals. The seeds are subsequently dispersed in a new spot some distance from the parent plant, frequently with feces that also serves as a little amount of fertilizer.In every ecosystem, there are interactions of this nature between species.[22] [23] [24]
Notes and References
- Web site: Plant-Animal Interactions - Botany - Trinity College Dublin . 2023-03-04 . www.tcd.ie.
- Book: Del-Claro . Kleber . Plant-Animal Interactions: Source of Biodiversity . Torezan-Silingardi . Helena Maura . 2021-05-03 . Springer Nature . 978-3-030-66877-8 . en.
- Chama . Lackson . Berens . Dana G. . Downs . Colleen T. . Farwig . Nina . 2013-01-24 . Habitat Characteristics of Forest Fragments Determine Specialisation of Plant-Frugivore Networks in a Mosaic Forest Landscape . PLOS ONE . en . 8 . 1 . e54956 . 10.1371/journal.pone.0054956 . 1932-6203 . 3554686 . 23365688. free .
- Castagneyrol . Bastien . Bonal . Damien . Damien . Maxime . Jactel . Hervé . Meredieu . Céline . Muiruri . Evalyne W. . Barbaro . Luc . May 2017 . Bottom-up and top-down effects of tree species diversity on leaf insect herbivory . Ecology and Evolution . en . 7 . 10 . 3520–3531 . 10.1002/ece3.2950 . 5433970 . 28515887.
- Strauss . Sharon Y. . Irwin . Rebecca E. . 2004-12-15 . Ecological and Evolutionary Consequences of Multispecies Plant-Animal Interactions . Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics . en . 35 . 1 . 435–466 . 10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.35.112202.130215 . 1543-592X.
- Fu . Qiang . Diez . Jose Bienvenido . Pole . Mike . García Ávila . Manuel . Liu . Zhong-Jian . Chu . Hang . Hou . Yemao . Yin . Pengfei . Zhang . Guo-Qiang . Du . Kaihe . Wang . Xin . 2018-12-18 . Taylor . David . Baldwin . Ian T . An unexpected noncarpellate epigynous flower from the Jurassic of China . eLife . 7 . e38827 . 10.7554/eLife.38827 . 30558712 . 2050-084X. 6298773 . free .
- Ramírez-Barahona . Santiago . Sauquet . Hervé . Magallón . Susana . September 2020 . The delayed and geographically heterogeneous diversification of flowering plant families . Nature Ecology & Evolution . 4 . 9 . 1232–1238 . 10.1038/s41559-020-1241-3 . 2397-334X . 32632260.
- Del-Claro . K. . Rico-Gray . V. . Torezan-Silingardi . H. M. . Alves-Silva . E. . Fagundes . R. . Lange . D. . Dáttilo . W. . Vilela . A. A. . Aguirre . A. . Rodriguez-Morales . D. . 2016-05-01 . Loss and gains in ant–plant interactions mediated by extrafloral nectar: fidelity, cheats, and lies . Insectes Sociaux . en . 63 . 2 . 207–221 . 10.1007/s00040-016-0466-2 . 1420-9098.
- Book: Thompson, John N. . Interaction and Coevolution . 2014-02-14 . University of Chicago Press . 978-0-226-12732-3 . en.
- Holeski . Liza M. . Hillstrom . Michael L. . Whitham . Thomas G. . Lindroth . Richard L. . November 2012 . Relative importance of genetic, ontogenetic, induction, and seasonal variation in producing a multivariate defense phenotype in a foundation tree species . Oecologia . 170 . 3 . 695–707 . 10.1007/s00442-012-2344-6 . 1432-1939 . 22652923.
- Bronstein . Judith L. . Alarcón . Ruben . Geber . Monica . 2006 . The evolution of plant-insect mutualisms . The New Phytologist . 172 . 3 . 412–428 . 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2006.01864.x . 0028-646X . 17083673. free .
- Castagneyrol . Bastien . Bonal . Damien . Damien . Maxime . Jactel . Hervé . Meredieu . Céline . Muiruri . Evalyne W. . Barbaro . Luc . May 2017 . Bottom-up and top-down effects of tree species diversity on leaf insect herbivory . Ecology and Evolution . en . 7 . 10 . 3520–3531 . 10.1002/ece3.2950 . 5433970 . 28515887.
- Milchunas . D. G. . Lauenroth . W. K. . November 1993 . Quantitative Effects of Grazing on Vegetation and Soils Over a Global Range of Environments: Ecological Archives M063-001 . Ecological Monographs . en . 63 . 4 . 327–366 . 10.2307/2937150 . 2937150 . 0012-9615.
- Allan G. Ellis, Steven D. Johnson . July–August 2012 . Lack of floral constancy by bee fly pollinators: implications for ethological isolation in an African daisy . Behavioral Ecology . 23 . 4 . 729–734 . 10.1093/beheco/ars019. 10.1093/beheco/ars019 . free .
- Sargent . Risa D. . Ackerly . David D. . 2008-03-01 . Plant–pollinator interactions and the assembly of plant communities . Trends in Ecology & Evolution . English . 23 . 3 . 123–130 . 10.1016/j.tree.2007.11.003 . 0169-5347 . 18262307.
- Agerbo Rasmussen . Jacob . Nielsen . Martin . Mak . Sarah S. T. . Döring . Johanna . Klincke . Franziska . Gopalakrishnan . Shyam . Dunn . Robert R. . Kauer . Randolf . Gilbert . Marcus Thomas Pius . January 2021 . eDNA-based biomonitoring at an experimental German vineyard to characterize how management regimes shape ecosystem diversity . Environmental DNA . en . 3 . 1 . 70–82 . 10.1002/edn3.131 . 225305322 . 2637-4943. free . 11250/2981839 . free .
- Ladin . Zachary S. . Ferrell . Barbra . Dums . Jacob T. . Moore . Ryan M. . Levia . Delphis F. . Shriver . W. Gregory . D’Amico . Vincent . Trammell . Tara L. E. . Setubal . João Carlos . Wommack . K. Eric . 2021-01-15 . Assessing the efficacy of eDNA metabarcoding for measuring microbial biodiversity within forest ecosystems . Scientific Reports . en . 11 . 1 . 1629 . 10.1038/s41598-020-80602-9 . 33452291 . 7811025 . 2045-2322.
- Lafferty, K. D. . Kuris, A. M. . 2002 . Trophic strategies, animal diversity and body size . Trends Ecol. Evol. . 17 . 11 . 507–513 . 10.1016/s0169-5347(02)02615-0.
- Book: Poulin, Robert . Robert Poulin (zoologist) . Evolutionary Ecology of Parasites . Princeton University Press . 2007 . 978-0-691-12085-0 . registration .
- Book: Wilson, Edward O. . Sociobiology: The New Synthesis, Twenty-Fifth Anniversary Edition . 2000-03-24 . Harvard University Press . 978-0-674-00089-6 . en.
- Web site: Rainforest Epiphytes . 2023-03-04 . Mongabay.com . en.
- Book: Bronstein, J. L. . The study of mutualism . Mutualism . Oxford University Press . 2015 . 9780199675654.
- Book: Fritsch . Felix Eugene . An introduction to the structure and reproduction of plants . Salisbury . Edward James . G. Bell . 1920 . vanc.
- Book: Mauseth, James D. . Botany: An Introduction to Plant Biology. . 2008 . Jones & Bartlett . 978-0-7637-5345-0 . vanc.