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Milkweeds,monarch butterflies and the ecological significance of cardenolides
Authors:Malcolm  Stephen B
Institution:(1) Department of Biological Sciences, Western Michigan University, 49008 Kalamazoo, Michigan, USA
Abstract:Summary The contribution of Miriam Rothschild to the ldquomonarch cardenolide storyrdquo is reviewed in the light of the 1914 challenge by the evolutionary biologist, E.B. Poulton for North American chemists to explain the chemical basis of unpalatability in monarch butterflies and their milkweed host plants. This challenge had lain unaccepted for nearly 50 years until Miriam Rothschild took up the gauntlet and showed with the help of many able colleagues that monarchs are aposematically coloured because they sequester toxic cardenolides from milkweed host plants for use as a defence against predators. By virtue of Dr Rothschild's inspiration and industry, and subsequently that of Lincoln Brower and his colleagues, this tritrophic interaction has become a familiar paradigm for the evolution of chemical defences and warning colouration. We now know that the cardenolide contents of different milkweeds vary quantitatively, qualitatively and spatially, both within and among species and we are starting to appreciate the implications of such variation. However, as Dr Rothschild has pointed out in her publications, cardenolides have sometimes blinded us to reality and it is curious how little evidence there is for a defensive function to cardenolides in plants — especially against adapted specialists such as the monarch. Thus the review will conclude with a discussion of the significance of temporal variation and induction of cardenolide production in plants, the ldquolethal plant defence paradoxrdquo and an emphasis on the dynamics of the cardenolide-mediated interaction between milkweeds and monarch larvae.
Keywords:cardenolides  cardiac glycosides  chemical defence induction  latex  parasitism  predation  sequestration  Insecta  Diptera  Tachinidae  Lepidoptera  Nymphalidae  Danainae  Danaus plexippus  Asclepiadaceae
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