# Local adaptation mosaic to leaf herbivores in the annual herb Datura stramonium

**Authors:** Guillermo Castillo, Adán Miranda-Pérez, Ken Oyama, Juan Núñez-Farfán

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s10265-025-01664-2 · Journal of Plant Research · 2025-08-29

## TL;DR

This study shows that the plant Datura stramonium exhibits a mixed pattern of local adaptation to both specialist and generalist herbivores in central Mexico.

## Contribution

The study provides evidence of a local adaptation mosaic in a generalist herbivore system, where such adaptation is not typically expected.

## Key findings

- Some Datura stramonium populations were locally adapted to both herbivores, while others were not.
- Leaf trichome density affected fruit production but did not correlate with local adaptation patterns.
- Local adaptation occurred regardless of whether herbivores were specialists or generalists.

## Abstract

Local adaptation is a central evolutionary process for creating/maintaining variation of traits mediating antagonistic interactions. However, few studies have evaluated the local adaptation of plants to their biological counterparts such as herbivores across the plants’ distribution. Most studies evaluating local adaptation to herbivores have focused on specialist systems, where local adaptation is likely to occur. However, there is less evidence regarding the existence of local adaptation on generalist systems, where local adaptation is not theoretically expected. We conducted a reciprocal transplant experiment involving four local populations aimed to detect whether local adaptation in the annual herb Datura stramonium to its specialist herbivore Lema daturaphila and the generalist herbivore Sphenarium purpurascens occur. We also explored whether leaf trichome density, a putative defensive trait of D. stramonium, is mediating local adaptation to herbivores through its association with plant fitness. We found that certain D. stramonium populations were locally adapted to both herbivores but others were not, regardless of whether these are preyed upon by generalist or specialist herbivores. Leaf trichome density had a significant effect on individual fruit production, although this effect was variable across locations (origin × site interaction) and unrelated to the observed local adaptation pattern. The results support a view of a local adaptation mosaic of D. stramonium to generalist and specialist herbivores in central Mexico.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10265-025-01664-2.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Datura stramonium (taxon 4076), Lema daturaphila (taxon 1845047), Sphenarium purpurascens (taxon 1603978)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Lema daturaphila (species) [taxon 1845047], Sphenarium purpurascens (species) [taxon 1603978], Datura stramonium (common thornapple, species) [taxon 4076]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

1 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12638408/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12638408