Plants use chemical defences to reduce damage from herbivores and the effectiveness of these defences can be
altered by biotic and abiotic factors, such as herbivory and soil resource availability. Streptanthus polygaloides, a
nickel (Ni) hyperaccumulator, possesses both Ni-based defences and organic defences (glucosinolates), but the
extent to which these defences interact and respond to environmental conditions is unknown. S. polygaloides plants
were grown on high-Ni and low-Ni soil and concentrations of Ni and glucosinolates were compared with those
of the congeneric non-hyperaccumulator, S. insignus spp. insignus, grown under the same conditions. Ni contents
were highest (4000 μg g−1 dry tissue) in S. polygaloides plants grown on high-Ni soil. Glucosinolate content was
significantly higher in S. insignus than in S. polygaloides suggesting that plants defended by Ni produce a lower
concentration of organic defences. In a separate experiment, high-Ni S. polygaloides plants were exposed to
simulated herbivory or live folivores to determine the inducibility of Ni-based and organic defences. Contents of
Ni were not affected by either herbivory treatment, whereas glucosinolate concentrations were >30% higher in
damaged plants. We concluded that the Ni-based defence of S. polygaloides is not induced by herbivory.