Abstract

1. Silicon (Si) is a beneficial nutrient that has been reported to ameliorate many abiotic and biotic stresses in plants, including insect herbivory. Insect herbivory has been shown to induce Si defences in plants, although the magnitude and nature of induction remain largely ambiguous. In particular, it is unclear whether herbivore induction of Si defences is confined to attacked tissues (local) or occurs elsewhere in the plant (systemic).2. We grew cucumber, Cucumis sativus L. plants (var. Burpless F1 and Beit Alpha), an intermediate Si accumulator, hydroponically under Si‐supplemented or Si‐free conditions and measured the level of Si induction caused by a polyphagous chewing insect, the cotton bollworm, Helicoverpa armigera (Hübner) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae). We also examined the impacts of Si on insect performance by conducting in vitro feeding assays on excised leaves (ex situ) and intact leaves on plants (in situ).3. Herbivory significantly increased Si accumulation both locally in attacked leaves (21% increase in Beit Alpha and 17% in Burpless F1) and systemically in non‐attacked leaves (19% increase in Beit Alpha and 10% in Burpless F1). Si supplementation significantly increased % foliar Si and C:N ratio, while significantly decreasing larval relative consumption (RC) and relative growth rate (RGR) in the in situ assays. In ex situ assays, however, Si only reduced larval RGR when fed on Beit Alpha plants.4. Our results confirm that Si‐based defences can also operate in moderate Si‐accumulating plants and, for the first time, that insect herbivory induces systemic Si accumulation equivalently between plant varieties.

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