EUROPEAN OAK METABOTYPES SHAPE DIGESTION AND FITNESS OF THE HERBIVORE
TORTRIX VIRIDANA
Abstract
Plants harbor a wide range of leaf-feeding insects. Insect survival and
fitness are influenced by both energy-rich molecules and phytochemicals
in the host foliage. Yet, how leaf chemical diversity and insect
microbiota - key factors in ecological and physiological processes –
shape insect nutrition and impact insect performance is still poorly
understood. Here we forced Tortrix viridana larvae, an oak-specialized
herbivore, to feed on two Quercus robur susceptible and resistant
metabolic phenotypes (metabotypes) and examined leaf, salivary, and
fecal metabolomes associated with larval performance, mortality, and
fecal microbiota. We show that host chemical diversity affects larval
development and that the distinct signatures of oak metabotypes are
maintained in the insect digestive system. Larvae were highly efficient
in nutrient assimilation and able to minimize plant chemical defenses,
thanks in part to the adaptation of the gut microbiota to the different
food qualities.