母性对后代质量和数量的分配是否能改善捕食者对后代存活率的影响?

IF 1.7 3区 农林科学 Q2 ENTOMOLOGY
Todd A. Ugine, Jessie Mutz, Nora Underwood, Jennifer S. Thaler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

生殖分配通常在后代的数量和质量之间取得平衡。暴露于捕食者等生态压力会导致生物沿着这一连续统一体改变其分配。虽然这种可塑性转变对后代表现的影响往往未经测试,但对于了解操纵捕食风险作为农业害虫管理技术的潜在长期效益至关重要。捕食风险会导致科罗拉多马铃薯甲虫(Leptinotarsa decemlineata,CPB)产卵量减少,并因母体供给而导致营养状况改善。在此,我们测试了密度的降低或后代营养状况的改善(这可能会提高幼虫的人均存活率)是否能补偿总产卵量的减少,尤其是当后代暴露于捕食者时。在两个田间试验中,我们控制了CPB幼虫的密度和状态,并测量了有天敌蝽(Podisus maculiventris)和无天敌蝽的田间笼子中CPB幼虫从发育到成年的存活率。不出所料,在没有捕食者的处理中,初始幼虫密度较高的笼子有更多的幼虫和成虫存活下来,不同密度的笼子存活率约为 30%-50%。在有捕食者的情况下,这种关系就不成立了,因为捕食是受密度影响的。在两个试验中,幼虫的状况与密度相互影响,并以不同的方式影响幼虫的存活率。在试验 1 中,未喂养的甲虫在较高密度下的存活率较高;在试验 2 中,喂养的甲虫在不同密度下的存活率较高。综述与应用:总的来说,我们通过对幼虫密度和状态的控制来测试捕食风险的影响,结果显示,降低密度和提高状态对猎物的净补偿效益很小。从后代数量到质量分配的转变给猎物带来的益处可能取决于影响密度依赖性强度的因素,包括捕食强度。我们的研究结果提出了一种新策略,即利用捕食者的非消耗性效应导致的猎物密度降低作为一种害虫管理方法来保护植物。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Do maternal allocations towards offspring quality and quantity ameliorate the effects of predators on offspring survival?

Reproductive allocation is often balanced between the quantity and quality of offspring. Ecological stresses, like exposure to predators, can cause organisms to shift their allocations along this continuum. While the consequences of such plastic shifts for offspring performance are often untested, they are critical to understanding the potential long-term benefits of manipulating predation risk as an agricultural pest management technique. Predation risk induces reductions in egg production and increases in nutritional condition due to maternal provisioning in Colorado potato beetles (Leptinotarsa decemlineata, CPB). Here, we tested whether reductions in density or increases in offspring condition, which may increase per-capita larval survival, can compensate for the reduction in total egg production, especially when offspring are exposed to predators. In two field trials, we manipulated density and condition of larval CPB and measured survival through development to adulthood in field cages with and without predaceous stink bugs (Podisus maculiventris). As expected, cages with the higher initial larval densities had more larvae and adults surviving in the treatments without predators – about 30%–50% survival across densities. When predators were present, this relationship did not hold because of density-dependent predation. Larval condition interacted with density and impacted larval survival in both trials albeit in different ways. In trial 1, unprovisioned beetles had higher survival at the higher densities; in trial 2, provisioned beetles had higher survival across densities. Synthesis and Applications: Overall, our test of the effects of predation risk via manipulations of larval density and condition revealed few net compensatory benefits to the prey of reduced density and higher condition. Benefits to the prey of shifts in allocation from the quantity to quality of offspring may depend on factors that influence the strength of density dependence, including predation intensity. Our results suggest a new strategy of taking advantage of the reductions in prey density due to non-consumptive effects of predators as a pest management approach to protect plants.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
5.30%
发文量
132
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Applied Entomology publishes original articles on current research in applied entomology, including mites and spiders in terrestrial ecosystems. Submit your next manuscript for rapid publication: the average time is currently 6 months from submission to publication. With Journal of Applied Entomology''s dynamic article-by-article publication process, Early View, fully peer-reviewed and type-set articles are published online as soon as they complete, without waiting for full issue compilation.
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