Seasonal variation in the strength and consistency of tritrophic interactions among treehoppers, plants, and ants may favor generalist relationships

IF 1.2 3区 农林科学 Q3 ENTOMOLOGY
T. William Shoenberger, Kasey D. Fowler-Finn
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Abstract

Organisms interact with numerous species in their environment, and these interactions can influence a variety of social and ecological processes. Thus, temporal and spatial variation in species interactions is important for understanding the fitness consequences of multi-trophic relationships. Here, we investigate how tritrophic interactions between a host plant generalist sap-feeding insect, host plant species, and ant mutualists vary in a prairie habitat. We used field transects to quantify the abundances of three host plant species, three species of ants, and the treehopper Entylia carinata. We repeated the transects from Spring until late Fall to quantify seasonal changes in abundances, and across three years to investigate stability of tritrophic relationships across years. In the first year of the study, we also measured plant height. Finally, we characterized variation in the tending behavior of the three species of ants. We found that certain plant-ant species combinations are more common than others. While tritrophic associations between plants, ants, and treehoppers changed seasonally, they were largely stable across years. Furthermore, we found pervasive effects of ants on E. carinata, including E. carinata presence and abundance, E. carinata aggregation size and abundance, E. carinata nest presence and abundance, and E. carinata nest-tending behavior. Plant species had fewer effects, but affected E. carinata presence and abundance as well as the likelihood of E. carinata aggregations occurring on a plant. Finally, significant seasonal changes in ant abundances and ant tending rates create dynamic temporal variation in tritrophic interactions. The patterns observed are likely to have significant effects on E. carinata populations, and—due to the importance of ant-treehopper mutualisms in local ecosystems—cascading effects on local communities.

Abstract Image

树跳虫、植物和蚂蚁之间三营养相互作用的强度和一致性的季节性变化可能有利于通才关系的形成
生物与环境中的众多物种相互作用,这些相互作用会影响各种社会和生态过程。因此,物种相互作用的时空变化对于了解多营养关系的适应性后果非常重要。在这里,我们研究了在草原生境中,寄主植物通性食树液昆虫、寄主植物物种和蚂蚁互惠者之间的三营养体相互作用是如何变化的。我们利用野外横断面来量化三种寄主植物、三种蚂蚁和树跳虫 Entylia carinata 的数量。我们从春季到秋末重复进行横断面调查,以量化丰度的季节性变化,并在三年内调查三营养关系在不同年份的稳定性。在研究的第一年,我们还测量了植物高度。最后,我们描述了三种蚂蚁趋向行为的变化。我们发现,某些植物-蚂蚁物种组合比其他物种组合更常见。虽然植物、蚂蚁和树蛙之间的三营养关联会随季节变化,但在不同年份基本保持稳定。此外,我们还发现了蚂蚁对箭毒树蛙的普遍影响,包括箭毒树蛙的存在和数量、箭毒树蛙聚集的大小和数量、箭毒树蛙巢的存在和数量以及箭毒树蛙的筑巢行为。植物种类的影响较小,但会影响到蚁后的出现和数量,以及蚁后在植物上聚集的可能性。最后,蚂蚁数量和蚂蚁趋巢率的明显季节性变化造成了三营养体相互作用的动态时间变化。观察到的模式很可能会对 E. carinata 的数量产生重大影响,而且由于蚂蚁-三足金龟子互利关系在当地生态系统中的重要性,还会对当地社区产生连带影响。
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来源期刊
Arthropod-Plant Interactions
Arthropod-Plant Interactions 生物-昆虫学
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
6.20%
发文量
58
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Arthropod-Plant Interactions is dedicated to publishing high quality original papers and reviews with a broad fundamental or applied focus on ecological, biological, and evolutionary aspects of the interactions between insects and other arthropods with plants. Coverage extends to all aspects of such interactions including chemical, biochemical, genetic, and molecular analysis, as well reporting on multitrophic studies, ecophysiology, and mutualism. Arthropod-Plant Interactions encourages the submission of forum papers that challenge prevailing hypotheses. The journal encourages a diversity of opinion by presenting both invited and unsolicited review papers.
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