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      Feeding rates of Balloniscus sellowii (Crustacea, Isopoda, Oniscidea): the effect of leaf litter decomposition and its relation to the phenolic and flavonoid content

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          Abstract

          Abstract

          The goal of this study was to compare the feeding rates of Balloniscus sellowii on leaves of different decomposition stages according to their phenolic and flavonoid content. Leaves from the visually most abundant plants were offered to isopods collected from the same source site. Schinus terebinthifolius ,the plant species consumed at the highest rate, was used to verify feeding rates at different decomposition stages. Green leaves were left to decompose for one, two, or three months, and then were offered to isopods. The total phenolic and flavonoid contents were determined for all decomposition stages. Consumption and egestion rates increased throughout decomposition, were highest for two-month-old leaves, and decreased again in the third month. The assimilation rate was highest for green leaves. The mode time of passage through the gut was two hours for all treatments. Ingestion of leaves occurred after two or three days for green leaves, and on the same day for one-, two- and three-month-old leaves. The speed of passage of leaves with different decomposition stages through the gut does not differ significantly when animals are fed continuously. However, it is possible that the amount retained in the gut during starvation differs depending on food quality. The digestibility value was corrected using a second food source to empty the gut of previously ingested food, so that all of the food from the experiment was egested. The digestibility value was highest for green leaves, whereas it was approximately 20% for all other stages. This was expected given that digestibility declines during decomposition as the metabolite content of the leaves decreases. The phenolic content was highest in the green leaves and lowest in three-month-old leaves. The flavonoid content was highest in green leaves and lowest after two months of decomposition. Animals ingested more phenolics when consumption was highest. The estimated amount of ingested flavonoids followed the same trend as assimilation rate. Flavonoids accounted for a large portion of total phenolics, and the estimated amount of flavonoids consumed was similar for one-, two- and three-month-old leaves. Our results suggest that the high phenolic and flavonoid concentrations in green leaves are feeding deterrents. Isopods may discriminate among concentrations of flavonoids and modify their consumption rates to maintain their intake of flavonoids when ingesting leaves with lower flavonoid content.

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          Macroevolution of plant defense strategies.

          Theories of plant defense expression are typically based on the concepts of tradeoffs among traits and of phylogenetic conservatism within clades. Here, I review recent developments in phylogenetic approaches to understanding the evolution of plant defense strategies and plant-herbivore coevolutionary interactions. I focus particularly on multivariate defense against insect herbivores, which is the simultaneous deployment of multiple traits, often arranged as convergently evolved defense syndromes. Answering many of the outstanding questions in the biology of plant defense will require generating broad hypotheses that can be explicitly tested by using comparative approaches and interpreting phylogenetic patterns. The comparative approach has wide-spread potential to reinvigorate tests of classic hypotheses about the evolution of interspecific interactions.
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            Flavonoids and isoflavonoids - a gold mine for metabolic engineering.

            Flavonoid-derived plant natural products have long been known to function as floral pigments for the attraction of insect pollinators, as signal molecules for beneficial microorganisms in the rhizosphere, and as antimicrobial defense compounds. New functions for flavonoid compounds continue to be found, particularly in plant-microorganism signaling, and there has been an explosion of interest in flavonoids and isoflavonoids as health-promoting components of the human diet. The flavonoid and isoflavonoid pathways are probably the best characterized natural product pathway in plants, and are therefore excellent targets for metabolic engineering. Manipulation of flavonoid biosynthesis can be approached via several strategies, including sense or antisense manipulation of pathway genes, modification of the expression of regulatory genes, or generation of novel enzymatic specificities by ra-tional approaches based on emerging protein structure data. In addition, activation tagging provides a novel approach for the discovery of uncharacterized structural and regulatory genes of flavonoid biosynthesis.
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              Phenolics in ecological interactions: The importance of oxidation.

              H. Appel (1993)
              The ecological activities of plant phenolics are diverse and highly variable. Although some variation is attributable to differences in concentration, structure, and evolutionary history of association with target organisms, much of it is unexplained, making it difficult to predict when and where phenolics will be active. I suggest that our understanding is limited by a failure to appreciate the importance of oxidative activation and the conditions that influence it. I summarize examples of oxidative activation of phenolics in ecological interactions, and argue that physicochemical conditions of the environment that control phenolic oxidation generate variation in ecological activity. Finally, I suggest that measurements of oxidative conditions can improve our predictions of phenolic activity and that experiments must be designed with conditions appropriate to the biochemical mode of phenolic action.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Zookeys
                Zookeys
                ZooKeys
                ZooKeys
                Pensoft Publishers
                1313-2989
                1313-2970
                2012
                20 March 2012
                : 176
                : 231-245
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Departamento de Zoologia, Laboratório de Carcinologia, Av. Bento Gonçalves, 9500, pr. 43435, 91501-970, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil
                [2 ]Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Departamento de Ecologia, PPG Ecologia, Av. Bento Gonçalves, 9500, pr. 43422, 91501-970, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil
                [3 ]Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Departamento de Botânica, Laboratório de Ecologia Química e Quimiotaxonomia, Av. Bento Gonçalves, 9500, pr. 43423, 91501-970, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil
                Author notes
                Corresponding author: Camila T. Wood ( ctwood86@ 123456gmail.com )

                Academic editor: S. Taiti

                Article
                10.3897/zookeys.176.1940
                3335417
                22536111
                63edbe98-0317-41cd-b674-762362d96866
                Camila Timm Wood, Carolina Casco Duarte Schlindwein, Geraldo Luiz Gonçalves Soares, Paula Beatriz Araujo

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 (CC-BY), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 22 August 2011
                : 6 January 2012
                Categories
                Article

                Animal science & Zoology
                digestibility,woodlice,consumption rate,flavonoid concentration,assimilation rate,total phenolics

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