When Caterpillars Attack, Tobacco Plants Use Their Own Spit Against Them


If you’re a tobacco hornworm caterpillar, your own spit can come back to bite you: That plant you tried to eat for dinner can use your own saliva to summon larger animals that might like to make you their dinner.

According to a study in Science, the tobacco plant has evolved a clever defense against hungry insects—it calls in the insects’ predators for help:

When a leaf is wounded, plants immediately release a “bouquet” of distress chemicals known as green leaf volatiles (GLVs) into the air. GLVs are formed when long fatty acid chains in the cell membranes are chopped up into six-carbon molecules as a result of damage. These molecules can exist in two different shapes, or isomers, depending on the position of a double bond between two of the carbons [The Scientist].

What’s cool, though, is that the tobacco plant gets personal when it’s being devoured. Ian Baldwin and colleagues found that the plant gives off a different set of GLVs when it’s damaged by a caterpillar than when it’s damaged in other ways. The plant’s chemicals, Baldwin says, seem to react with those in the caterpillar’s saliva to create a signal that captures the attention of the caterpillar’s predators.

source: discover magazine

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