Gassmann, A. J. and J. Daniel Hare.
(in press).
Indirect Cost of a Defensive Trait: Variation in Trichome Type Affects
the Natural Enemies of Herbivorous Insects on Datura wrightii. Oecologia.
Abstract. The costs and benefits of defensive traits in plants can
have an ecological component that arises from the effect of defenses on the
natural enemies of herbivores. We tested
if glandular trichomes in Datura wrightii,
a trait that confers resistance to several species of herbivorous insects,
impose an ecological cost by decreasing rates of predation by the natural
enemies of herbivores. For two common
herbivores of D. wrightii, Lema daturaphila and Tupiocoris notatus, several generalized
species of natural enemies exhibited lower rates of predation on glandular
compared to non-glandular plants. Lower
rates of predation were associated with reductions in the residence time and
foraging efficiency of natural enemies on plants with glandular trichomes, but
not with direct toxic effects of glandular exudate. Our results suggest that the benefit of
resistance to herbivores conferred by glandular trichomes might be offset by
the detrimental effect of this trait on the natural enemies of herbivores, and
that the fitness consequences of this trichome defense might depend on the
composition and abundance of the natural-enemy community.