Chemical communication between plants and insectsThe chemical communication between plants and insects plays a pivotal role in shaping plant-insect interactions and ecological networks, making it a vital component in both natural and agricultural ecosystems. Despite the considerable advancements in the field of chemical ecology (Meinwald & Eisner, 2008), numerous challenges remain due to its interdisciplinary nature (encompassing evolutionary biology, neurobiology, chemistry, animal behavior, and network ecology), as well as the complexity of chemical communication (including mediating mutualistic and antagonistic relationships, and multifunctional roles at the community level). In this special issue of the Journal of Systematics and Evolution, we present a collection of 10 papers addressing these challenges through original research and comprehensive reviews of relevant subfields. The contributions can be organized into four primary themes: (i) community-level communication theory (Zu et al., 2022) and its application to plant-pollinator communities (Yang et al., 2022); (ii) the evolutionary history of communication from a phylogenetic and macroevolutionary perspective (Martel et al., 2021;Schwery et al., 2022); (iii) various communication types, including plant-pollinator (Martel et al., 2021), plant-pest (Fang et al., 2023, and plant-fungi-insect interactions (Xu et al., 2023); and (iv) an exploration of different communication factors such as distyly (Zeng et al., 2022), odor dynamics (Feng et al., 2022), chemical structures (Zhang et al., 2022, and the impact of herbicides (Ramos et al., 2022).