Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Chapter One The integrative roles of plant secondary metabolites in natural systems
- Chapter Two Natural selection for anti-herbivore plant secondary metabolites
- Chapter Three Temporal changes in plant secondary metabolite production
- Chapter Four Mixtures of plant secondary metabolites
- Chapter Five The herbivore’s prescription
- Chapter Six Volatile isoprenoids and abiotic stresses
- Chapter Seven Atmospheric change, plant secondary metabolites and ecological interactions
- Chapter Eight The role of plant secondary metabolites in freshwater macrophyte–herbivore interactions
- Chapter Nine The soil microbial community and plant foliar defences against insects
- Chapter Ten Phytochemicals as mediators of aboveground–belowground interactions in plants
- Chapter Eleven Plant secondary metabolites and the interactions between plants and other organisms
- Chapter Twelve Integrating the effects of PSMs on vertebrate herbivores across spatial and temporal scales
- Chapter Thirteen Plant secondary metabolite polymorphisms and the extended chemical phenotype
- Chapter Fourteen From genes to ecosystems
- Chapter Fifteen Asking the ecosystem if herbivory-inducible plant volatiles (HIPVs) have defensive functions
- Chapter Sixteen Dynamics of plant secondary metabolites and consequences for food chains and community dynamics
- Index
- Plate Section
- References
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Chapter One The integrative roles of plant secondary metabolites in natural systems
- Chapter Two Natural selection for anti-herbivore plant secondary metabolites
- Chapter Three Temporal changes in plant secondary metabolite production
- Chapter Four Mixtures of plant secondary metabolites
- Chapter Five The herbivore’s prescription
- Chapter Six Volatile isoprenoids and abiotic stresses
- Chapter Seven Atmospheric change, plant secondary metabolites and ecological interactions
- Chapter Eight The role of plant secondary metabolites in freshwater macrophyte–herbivore interactions
- Chapter Nine The soil microbial community and plant foliar defences against insects
- Chapter Ten Phytochemicals as mediators of aboveground–belowground interactions in plants
- Chapter Eleven Plant secondary metabolites and the interactions between plants and other organisms
- Chapter Twelve Integrating the effects of PSMs on vertebrate herbivores across spatial and temporal scales
- Chapter Thirteen Plant secondary metabolite polymorphisms and the extended chemical phenotype
- Chapter Fourteen From genes to ecosystems
- Chapter Fifteen Asking the ecosystem if herbivory-inducible plant volatiles (HIPVs) have defensive functions
- Chapter Sixteen Dynamics of plant secondary metabolites and consequences for food chains and community dynamics
- Index
- Plate Section
- References
Summary
Preface
Although chemical interactions between plants and other organisms had been documented many years previously (e.g. Stahl, 1888; Verschaffelt, 1910), it was the seminal work of Fraenkel published in 1959 that placed the ecological function of plant secondary metabolites (PSMs) onto the agenda of modern ecology. He recognised that PSMs are not merely a repository for plants’ waste products, but rather they had a primary function: they could act as defences against enemies such as phytophagous insects. Crucially, he also realised that these enemies exert a selection pressure on the plants to defend themselves. Since then, numerous ecological roles of PSMs have been elucidated, notably as defences against a broad range of herbivores and pathogens, as mediators of interactions with competitors and mutualists, and as defence against abiotic stress. Recently, emerging developments have taken us well beyond consideration of PSMs in the context of simple interactions between pairs of species. Our view of plant secondary metabolites has shifted significantly in the past 50 years and we now understand the subtlety and scale of their effects, which cross trophic levels, spread throughout ecosystems, and even affect global processes. At the same time, methodological developments, particularly in the ‘-omics’ technologies, have led to a greater understanding of the synthesis and regulation of PSMs. These methodological developments now also facilitate unique tools for the targeted manipulation of both the synthesis of PSMs and their ecological function independently of other phenotypic effects. Consequently, we are now in a position to assess the extent to which PSMs and their effects traverse natural systems from genes upwards, and, in the spirit of Fraenkel, the reciprocal effects of the biotic and abiotic environment on those genes. This is, therefore, the ideal time to take stock of our current understanding of the function, ecology and evolution of PSMs, in order to focus our future efforts to use this knowledge to best effect in science and its application.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Ecology of Plant Secondary MetabolitesFrom Genes to Global Processes, pp. xiii - xviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012