Feeding preferences of the endemic gastropod Astraea latispina in relation to chemical defenses of Brazilian tropical seaweeds

Seaweed preference by the Brazilian endemic gastropod Astraea latispina was examined in the laboratory to evaluate the role of secondary metabolites in determining food choice. Of three species of seaweeds examined, Plocamium brasiliense was highly preferred; less so were Sargassum furcatum and Dict...

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Main Authors: PEREIRA R. C., PINHEIRO M. D., TEIXEIRA V. L., GAMA B. A. P. da
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Instituto Internacional de Ecologia 2002-01-01
Series:Brazilian Journal of Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842002000100005
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spelling doaj-0bd535a88e1641fdb9a8f02cad15b0f22020-11-25T01:36:29ZengInstituto Internacional de EcologiaBrazilian Journal of Biology1519-69841678-43752002-01-016213340Feeding preferences of the endemic gastropod Astraea latispina in relation to chemical defenses of Brazilian tropical seaweedsPEREIRA R. C.PINHEIRO M. D.TEIXEIRA V. L.GAMA B. A. P. daSeaweed preference by the Brazilian endemic gastropod Astraea latispina was examined in the laboratory to evaluate the role of secondary metabolites in determining food choice. Of three species of seaweeds examined, Plocamium brasiliense was highly preferred; less so were Sargassum furcatum and Dictyota cervicornis were preferred less. Extracts and/or pure major metabolites of the two potentially chemically-defended seaweeds (P. brasiliense and D. cervicornis) were tested as feeding deterrents against A. latispina. Algal extract assays demonstrated that three concentrations of crude organic extract of the red alga P. brasiliense (50%, 100%: natural concentration, and 200% of dry weight: dw) did not affect feeding of this gastropod. In contrast, the three concentrations of crude organic extract of the brown alga D. cervicornis (50%, 100% and 200% dw) inhibited feeding by A. latispina. The chemical deterrent property of D. cervicornis extract against the gastropod A. latispina occurred due to a mixture of the secodolastane diterpenes isolinearol/linearol (4:1 -- 0.08% dry weight). This is the first report showing that Dictyota cervicornis produces a chemical defense against herbivores using secodolastane diterpenoid. In addition, these results widen the action spectrum of secondary metabolites found in seaweed belonging to this brown algal genus.http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842002000100005seaweedDictyota cervicornischemical defensesherbivory
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author PEREIRA R. C.
PINHEIRO M. D.
TEIXEIRA V. L.
GAMA B. A. P. da
spellingShingle PEREIRA R. C.
PINHEIRO M. D.
TEIXEIRA V. L.
GAMA B. A. P. da
Feeding preferences of the endemic gastropod Astraea latispina in relation to chemical defenses of Brazilian tropical seaweeds
Brazilian Journal of Biology
seaweed
Dictyota cervicornis
chemical defenses
herbivory
author_facet PEREIRA R. C.
PINHEIRO M. D.
TEIXEIRA V. L.
GAMA B. A. P. da
author_sort PEREIRA R. C.
title Feeding preferences of the endemic gastropod Astraea latispina in relation to chemical defenses of Brazilian tropical seaweeds
title_short Feeding preferences of the endemic gastropod Astraea latispina in relation to chemical defenses of Brazilian tropical seaweeds
title_full Feeding preferences of the endemic gastropod Astraea latispina in relation to chemical defenses of Brazilian tropical seaweeds
title_fullStr Feeding preferences of the endemic gastropod Astraea latispina in relation to chemical defenses of Brazilian tropical seaweeds
title_full_unstemmed Feeding preferences of the endemic gastropod Astraea latispina in relation to chemical defenses of Brazilian tropical seaweeds
title_sort feeding preferences of the endemic gastropod astraea latispina in relation to chemical defenses of brazilian tropical seaweeds
publisher Instituto Internacional de Ecologia
series Brazilian Journal of Biology
issn 1519-6984
1678-4375
publishDate 2002-01-01
description Seaweed preference by the Brazilian endemic gastropod Astraea latispina was examined in the laboratory to evaluate the role of secondary metabolites in determining food choice. Of three species of seaweeds examined, Plocamium brasiliense was highly preferred; less so were Sargassum furcatum and Dictyota cervicornis were preferred less. Extracts and/or pure major metabolites of the two potentially chemically-defended seaweeds (P. brasiliense and D. cervicornis) were tested as feeding deterrents against A. latispina. Algal extract assays demonstrated that three concentrations of crude organic extract of the red alga P. brasiliense (50%, 100%: natural concentration, and 200% of dry weight: dw) did not affect feeding of this gastropod. In contrast, the three concentrations of crude organic extract of the brown alga D. cervicornis (50%, 100% and 200% dw) inhibited feeding by A. latispina. The chemical deterrent property of D. cervicornis extract against the gastropod A. latispina occurred due to a mixture of the secodolastane diterpenes isolinearol/linearol (4:1 -- 0.08% dry weight). This is the first report showing that Dictyota cervicornis produces a chemical defense against herbivores using secodolastane diterpenoid. In addition, these results widen the action spectrum of secondary metabolites found in seaweed belonging to this brown algal genus.
topic seaweed
Dictyota cervicornis
chemical defenses
herbivory
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842002000100005
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