Abstract

Plant responses to natural enemies include formation of secondary metabolites acting as direct or indirect defenses. Volatile terpenes represent one of the most diverse groups of secondary metabolites. We aimed to explore evolutionary patterns of volatile terpene emission. We measured the composition of damage‐induced volatile terpenes from 202 Amazonian tree species, spanning the angiosperm phylogeny. Volatile terpenes were extracted with solid‐phase micro extraction and desorbed in a gas chromatography–mass spectrometry for compound identification. The chemical diversity of the terpene blend showed a strong phylogenetic signal as closely related species emitted a similar number of compounds. Closely related species also tended to have compositionally similar blends, although this relationship was weak. Meanwhile, the ability to emit a given compound showed no significant phylogenetic signal for 200 of 286 compounds, indicating a high rate of diversification in terpene synthesis and/or great variability in their expression. Three lineages (Magnoliales, Laurales, and Sapindales) showed exceptionally high rates of terpene diversification. Of the 70 compounds found in >10% of their species, 69 displayed significant correlated evolution with at least one other compound. These results provide insights into the complex evolutionary history of volatile terpenes in angiosperms, while highlighting the need for further research into this important class of compounds.

Highlights

  • The interactions of plants with pollinators, herbivores, and pathogens are mediated by the chemical compounds they emit (Hartmann 2007)

  • The total number of compounds found in each species exhibited high and significant phylogenetic signal (k = 0.65, P < 0.01), this pattern was stronger for sesquiterpenes (k = 0.71, P < 0.01) than for monoterpenes (k = 0.14, P = 0.04)

  • We determined the composition of the emitted volatile terpene blend for 202 tropical tree species and examined patterns of compound evolution, diversification, and correlated evolution

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Summary

Introduction

The interactions of plants with pollinators, herbivores, and pathogens are mediated by the chemical compounds they emit (Hartmann 2007). Such compounds have been historically defined as secondary metabolites, that is chemical compounds that are not used directly for growth or reproduction (Fraenkel 1959). They are characterized in plants by a large structural diversity, with over 200,000 compounds identified to date, with many more expected to be discovered (Hartmann 2007).

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