Direct and indirect effects of companion cropping alter maize secondary
metabolism and affect herbivore resistance
Abstract
Evidence has accumulated supporting the beneficial impacts of
strategically diversified cropping systems on ecosystem services like
plant resistance to herbivory, but the underlying mechanisms remain
largely unknown. Through a microcosm experiment we investigate how
intercropping and cover cropping with three different companion legume
species change plant secondary metabolite profiles of focal maize
plants, the resulting effects on herbivore resistance, and the potential
for such ecosystem services to persist when using a conventional maize
variety. Intercropping produced a fundamentally different leaf and root
secondary metabolite profile compared to maize plants grown under cover
crop-conditioned soils. In leaf and root tissue, defense-related
compounds such as benzoxazinoids were upregulated under intercropping,
affecting maize metabolic profiles in a companion species-specific
manner. Resistance bioassays to the generalist herbivore
Spodoptera frugiperda revealed that intercropping significantly
reduces the overall leaf area consumed, while bean intercropping
increases larval mortality and alfalfa intercropping reduces larval
mortality. Our results contribute to the understanding of diversified
cropping systems by studying how plant-plant and plant-soil interactions
drive metabolic changes leading to different resistance outcomes and
show how these positive resistance effects persist under conventional
systems. These insights are crucial to inform adoption and development
of synergistic relations in diversified agricultural landscapes.