Herbivores often manipulate their host plants to use them better as resources. Herbivorous insects favorably alter the
microhabitat in which the herbivore feeds to counter existing plant defenses. For example, caterpillars from the families
Pyralidae and
Ctenuchidae roll mature leaves of the
neotropical shrub
Psychotria horizontalis around an expanding bud that they consume. By rolling the leaves, the insects reduce the amount of light reaching the bud by 95%, and this shading prevents leaf toughness and leaf tannin concentrations in the expanding bud, while maintaining the amount of nutritional gain of
nitrogen. Lepidoptera larvae also tie leaves together and feed on the inside of the leaves to decrease the effectiveness of the
phototoxin hypericin in
St. John's-wort. Herbivores also manipulate their microhabitat by forming
galls, plant structures made of plant tissue but controlled by the herbivore. Galls act as both domatia (housing), and food sources for the gall maker. The interior of a gall is composed of edible nutritious tissue.
Aphid galls in narrow leaf cottonwood (
Populus angustifolia) act as “physiologic sinks,” concentrating resources in the gall from the surrounding plant parts. Galls may also provide the herbivore protection from predators. Some herbivores use feeding behaviors that are capable of disarming the defenses of their host plants. One such plant defensive strategy is the use of
latex and
resin canals that contain sticky toxins and digestibility reducers. These canal systems store fluids under pressure, and when ruptured (i.e. from herbivory) secondary metabolic products flow to the release point. Herbivores can evade this defense, however, by damaging the
leaf veins. This technique minimizes the outflow of latex or resin beyond the cut and allows herbivores to freely feed above the damaged section. Several strategies are employed by herbivores to relieve canal pressure, including vein cutting and trenching. Vein cutting is when a herbivore creates small openings along the length of the leaf vein, while trenching refers to the creation of a cut across the width the leaf allowing the individual to safely consume the separated portion. There is also a third technique known as girdling where a
folivore will create an incision going around the stem disconnecting the leaf from the canals in the rest of the plant. Dussourd and Denno examined the behavior of 33 species of insect herbivores on 10 families of plants with canals and found that herbivores on plants with branching canal systems used vein cutting, while herbivores found on plants with net-like canal systems employed trenching to evade plant defenses. This cost can be seen when plants that use chemical defenses are compared to those plants that do not, in situations when herbivores are excluded. Several species of
insects sequester and deploy plant chemicals for their own defense. Caterpillar and adult
monarch butterflies store
cardiac glycosides from
milkweed, making these organisms distasteful. After eating a monarch caterpillar or butterfly, the
bird predator will usually vomit, leading the bird to avoid eating similar looking butterflies in the future. Two different species of milkweed bug in the family
Hemiptera,
Lygaeus kalmii and
large milkweed bug (
Oncopeltus fasciatus), are colored with bright orange and black, and are said to be
aposematically colored, in that they "advertise" their distastefulness by being brightly colored. Secondary metabolic products can also be useful to herbivores due to the antibiotic properties of the toxins, which can protect herbivores against
pathogens. Additionally, secondary metabolic products can act as cues to identify a plant for feeding or
oviposition (egg laying) by herbivores. ==References==