Forests | |
Plant Tannins and Essential Oils Have an Additive Deterrent Effect on Diet Choice by Kangaroos | |
Christine Rafferty1  Byron B. Lamont1  | |
[1] Ecology Section, School of Molecular and Life Sciences, Curtin University, Perth, WA 6845, Australia; | |
关键词: antiherbivory; 1,8-cineole; essential oil; feeding behaviour; kangaroo; Myrtaceae; | |
DOI : 10.3390/f12121639 | |
来源: DOAJ |
【 摘 要 】
Tannins and essential oils are well recognised as antiherbivore compounds. We investigated the relative effectiveness of the polyphenol, tannin, and the essential oils, 1,8-cineole and pine oil, as feeding deterrents against western grey kangaroos. Both groups of secondary metabolites are naturally abundant in many Australian plants. These three metabolite groups were incorporated separately or together into standard pellets for presentation to kangaroos, and their behaviour (sequence of food choice and feeding time) and amounts consumed were observed. The control (with no secondary metabolites) was much preferred. There was a sharp reduction in the ingestion of pellets containing tannins, 1,8-cineole or pine oil. Combinations of the metabolites resulted in almost no consumption. In association with tannin, pellets containing either 1,8-cineole or pine oil were as effective deterrents as both combined. There was a strong correlation between time spent feeding on the different diets and the amount of food consumed, although the rate of intake was markedly slower when secondary metabolites were present. Behavioural observations showed that the amount of food ingested is initially guided by the presence/absence of essential oils, apparently detected by smell, and later by the presence/absence of tannins, by taste. Both groups of secondary metabolites work in concert by stimulating different senses that minimise herbivory by marsupials, such as the western grey kangaroo, and help to explain their abundance in the Australian flora.
【 授权许可】
Unknown