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Autotoxic effects of essential oils on photosynthesis in parsley, parsnip, and rough lemon
Authors:Linus Gog  May R Berenbaum  Evan H DeLucia  Arthur R Zangerl
Institution:(1) Department of Entomology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 320 Morrill Hall 505 S., Goodwin Urbana, IL, 61801;(2) Department of Plant Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 265 Morrill Hall 505 S., Goodwin Urbana, IL, 61801
Abstract:Summary. Many plant species contain essential oils with allelochemical properties, yet the extent to which these same chemicals can be autotoxic is unclear. In this study, we tested the toxicity of several essential oil components to three species that produce them—Pastinaca sativa and Petroselinum crispum (Apiaceae), and Citrus jambhiri (Rutaceae). The effects of exogenous application of small amounts of essential oil components to the surface of foliage, followed by a pinprick to allow entry into the leaf, were monitored by chlorophyll fluorescence imaging. Rapid and spatially extensive declines in photosynthetic capacity were detected within 200 s. The most toxic constituents were monoterpenes. Two sesquiterpenes, caryophyllene and farnesene, and the phenylpropanoid myristicin, by comparison, were not toxic. Autotoxicity of endogenous essential oil was investigated by slicing through containment structures (glands or tubes); significant toxicity, manifested by reduced photosynthetic activity, was observed in all three species but was most pronounced in P. sativa and P. crispum, both of which possess oil tubes.
Keywords:Autotoxicity  essential oils  Apiaceae  wild parsnip  parsley  Citrus
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