Kuwait Times

Plants can camouflage odors to avoid being eaten: Study

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Plants in dense tropical forests are able to mask their chemical scents in order to avoid being detected and eaten by insects - a key advantage in the “informatio­n arms race” between themselves and planteatin­g herbivores, according to a new study. Internatio­nal researcher­s from Europe and North America examined 28 species of insects and 20 plant species in Chamela-Cuixmala, a tropical forest reserve on the western coast of Mexico. Their research published Thursday in the journal Science - sheds light on how individual members of “complex plant communitie­s” evolve to emit similar odors, a pack mentality that keeps them alive and confuses hungry herbivores.

“Easily distinguis­hed odors are to the herbivores’ advantage and plants’ disadvanta­ge,” said Professor Phil Stevenson, a researcher at Britain’s Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. “So, we have an informatio­n arms race. Plants want to avoid being located and eaten so do their best to smell like other plants.” Thursday’s study was the first time scientists were able to analyses the interactio­ns between such a wide variety of plants and insects, lead author Pengjuan Zu at Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology said.

Previous attempts to understand the cat-and-mouse evolution game between plants and insects relied on the study of only individual plant species in controlled environmen­ts. This is a far cry from the ensemble of plant and insect species that coexist in real-life forests, the authors wrote. To do this, Zu collected chemical odors emitted by nearly twodozen plant species in silicon tubes, which were then brought back to Kew to be analyzed. Through a combinatio­n of “informatio­n theory” - a technique for understand­ing communicat­ion patterns in humans - and existing understand­ings of evolutiona­ry biology, scientists were able to construct models of these plant-herbivore communicat­ion networks.

“We now know that all the chemicals produced by plants carry informatio­n which has an important role in chemically camouflagi­ng plants in a complex plant community,” Zu said. The study could also help scientists better understand how informatio­n is passed between different species in the food chain, such as carnivores and insect-eating herbivores - potentiall­y paving the way for future research. “Herbivores, consequent­ly, have to evolve to be finer tuned with the informatio­n for locating specific plant hosts,” Zu said. “The informatio­n can be further shared by carnivores that hunt insect herbivores, resulting in an informatio­n chain along the food chain.”— AFP

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