蝴蝶
种族(生物学)
基因组
生物
基因
遗传学
基因复制
进化生物学
计算生物学
生态学
古生物学
作者
Patrick P. Edger,Hanna M. Heidel‐Fischer,Michaël Bekaert,Jadranka Rota,Gernot Glöckner,Adrian E. Platts,David G. Heckel,Joshua P. Der,Eric Wafula,Michelle Tang,Johannes A. Hofberger,Ann Smithson,Jocelyn C. Hall,Matthieu Blanchette,Thomas E. Bureau,Stephen Wright,Claude W. dePamphilis,M. Eric Schranz,Michael S. Barker,Gavin C. Conant
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1503926112
摘要
Significance This research uncovers the mechanisms of an ancient arms race between butterflies and plants, seen today in countless gardens as caterpillars of cabbage butterflies that devour cabbage crop varieties. Nearly 90 million years ago, the ancestors of Brassica (mustards, cabbage) and related plants developed a chemical defense called glucosinolates. While very toxic to most insects, humans experience glucosinolates as the sharp taste in wasabi, horseradish and mustard. Here we report that this triggered a chemical arms race that escalated in complexity over time. By investigating the evolutionary histories of these plants and insects, we found that major increases in chemical defense complexity were followed by butterflies evolving countertactics to allow them to continue to attack and feed on the plants.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI