Selenium (Se), at elevated levels, is toxic and responsible for the loss of $330 million worth of livestock annually in the
Results/Conclusions
In the first study, two field surveys showed that the Se hyperaccumulator Astragalus bisulcatus (two-grooved milkvetch), growing naturally on prairie dog colonies, were more protected from prairie dog herbivory than other plants on the same sites. Follow-up manipulative field studies showed that plants pretreated with Se suffer less prairie dog herbivory than plants of the same species treated without Se. During the second study, observations revealed a population of the invasive diamondback moth (Plutella xylostella) in the field thriving on Se hyperacccumulating plants, which were toxic to other herbivores. Laboratory studies revealed that this population of diamondback moth did not suffer Se toxicity and had no feeding or oviposition preference between plants treated with and without Se. In contrast, a population of diamondback moth collected from a Se free environment was sensitive to Se and preferred to feed and oviposit on plants without Se. The tolerance mechanism was discovered using x-ray absorption spectroscopy, which revealed that the Se tolerant population accumulates methylselenocysteine compared to the Se sensitive population, which accumulates the more toxic selenocysteine.
These results lend support to the elemental defense hypothesis as well as provide insight into the natural Se fluxes in Se-enriched systems.