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Composition and Food Web Structure of Aphid-Parasitoid Populations on Plum Orchards in Chile

SIMPLE SUMMARY: In terrestrial natural ecosystems, more complex and diverse networks of plant–insect primary consumers and their predators are often more productive, stable, and resilient. Plant diversity often positively correlates to the diversity of phytophagous insects and their natural enemies...

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Autores principales: Alvarez-Baca, Jeniffer K., Montealegre, Xiomara, Alfaro-Tapia, Armando, Zepeda-Paulo, Francisca, Van Baaren, Joan, Lavandero, Blas, Le Lann, Cécile
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10051262/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36975973
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects14030288
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author Alvarez-Baca, Jeniffer K.
Montealegre, Xiomara
Alfaro-Tapia, Armando
Zepeda-Paulo, Francisca
Van Baaren, Joan
Lavandero, Blas
Le Lann, Cécile
author_facet Alvarez-Baca, Jeniffer K.
Montealegre, Xiomara
Alfaro-Tapia, Armando
Zepeda-Paulo, Francisca
Van Baaren, Joan
Lavandero, Blas
Le Lann, Cécile
author_sort Alvarez-Baca, Jeniffer K.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: In terrestrial natural ecosystems, more complex and diverse networks of plant–insect primary consumers and their predators are often more productive, stable, and resilient. Plant diversity often positively correlates to the diversity of phytophagous insects and their natural enemies generating multitrophic interactions with changing outcomes (bottom-up effects). The use of cover crops can promote natural enemy populations and their temporal synchronization with a target pest, resulting in greater pest control. Therefore, changes in the habitat conditions can alter food webs. In agroecosystems, characteristics of the food trophic webs, as connectance, measured as the proportion of realized links in the network, could be linked to the efficiency of pest control. In this study, we evaluated how the use of oat cover crops affects composition and structure in the aphid–parasitoid–hyperparasitoid food webs of plum orchards with different habitat management contexts: plums with inter-rows of oats as a cover crop (OCC) and plums with inter-rows with spontaneous vegetation (SV). Quantitative food web metrics differed significantly among treatments showing a higher generality, vulnerability, interaction evenness, and linkage density in SV, while OCC presented a higher degree of specialization. ABSTRACT: By increasing plant diversity in agroecosystems, it has been proposed that one can enhance and stabilize ecosystem functioning by increasing natural enemies’ diversity. Food web structure determines ecosystem functioning as species at different trophic levels are linked in interacting networks. We compared the food web structure and composition of the aphid– parasitoid and aphid-hyperparasitoid networks in two differentially managed plum orchards: plums with inter-rows of oats as a cover crop (OCC) and plums with inter-rows of spontaneous vegetation (SV). We hypothesized that food web composition and structure vary between OCC and SV, with network specialization being higher in OCC and a more complex food web composition in SV treatment. We found a more complex food web composition with a higher species richness in SV compared to OCC. Quantitative food web metrics differed significantly among treatments showing a higher generality, vulnerability, interaction evenness, and linkage density in SV, while OCC presented a higher degree of specialization. Our results suggest that plant diversification can greatly influence the food web structure and composition, with bottom-up effects induced by plant and aphid hosts that might benefit parasitoids and provide a better understanding of the activity, abundance, and interactions between aphids, parasitoids, and hyperparasitoids in plum orchards.
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spelling pubmed-100512622023-03-30 Composition and Food Web Structure of Aphid-Parasitoid Populations on Plum Orchards in Chile Alvarez-Baca, Jeniffer K. Montealegre, Xiomara Alfaro-Tapia, Armando Zepeda-Paulo, Francisca Van Baaren, Joan Lavandero, Blas Le Lann, Cécile Insects Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: In terrestrial natural ecosystems, more complex and diverse networks of plant–insect primary consumers and their predators are often more productive, stable, and resilient. Plant diversity often positively correlates to the diversity of phytophagous insects and their natural enemies generating multitrophic interactions with changing outcomes (bottom-up effects). The use of cover crops can promote natural enemy populations and their temporal synchronization with a target pest, resulting in greater pest control. Therefore, changes in the habitat conditions can alter food webs. In agroecosystems, characteristics of the food trophic webs, as connectance, measured as the proportion of realized links in the network, could be linked to the efficiency of pest control. In this study, we evaluated how the use of oat cover crops affects composition and structure in the aphid–parasitoid–hyperparasitoid food webs of plum orchards with different habitat management contexts: plums with inter-rows of oats as a cover crop (OCC) and plums with inter-rows with spontaneous vegetation (SV). Quantitative food web metrics differed significantly among treatments showing a higher generality, vulnerability, interaction evenness, and linkage density in SV, while OCC presented a higher degree of specialization. ABSTRACT: By increasing plant diversity in agroecosystems, it has been proposed that one can enhance and stabilize ecosystem functioning by increasing natural enemies’ diversity. Food web structure determines ecosystem functioning as species at different trophic levels are linked in interacting networks. We compared the food web structure and composition of the aphid– parasitoid and aphid-hyperparasitoid networks in two differentially managed plum orchards: plums with inter-rows of oats as a cover crop (OCC) and plums with inter-rows of spontaneous vegetation (SV). We hypothesized that food web composition and structure vary between OCC and SV, with network specialization being higher in OCC and a more complex food web composition in SV treatment. We found a more complex food web composition with a higher species richness in SV compared to OCC. Quantitative food web metrics differed significantly among treatments showing a higher generality, vulnerability, interaction evenness, and linkage density in SV, while OCC presented a higher degree of specialization. Our results suggest that plant diversification can greatly influence the food web structure and composition, with bottom-up effects induced by plant and aphid hosts that might benefit parasitoids and provide a better understanding of the activity, abundance, and interactions between aphids, parasitoids, and hyperparasitoids in plum orchards. MDPI 2023-03-15 /pmc/articles/PMC10051262/ /pubmed/36975973 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects14030288 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Alvarez-Baca, Jeniffer K.
Montealegre, Xiomara
Alfaro-Tapia, Armando
Zepeda-Paulo, Francisca
Van Baaren, Joan
Lavandero, Blas
Le Lann, Cécile
Composition and Food Web Structure of Aphid-Parasitoid Populations on Plum Orchards in Chile
title Composition and Food Web Structure of Aphid-Parasitoid Populations on Plum Orchards in Chile
title_full Composition and Food Web Structure of Aphid-Parasitoid Populations on Plum Orchards in Chile
title_fullStr Composition and Food Web Structure of Aphid-Parasitoid Populations on Plum Orchards in Chile
title_full_unstemmed Composition and Food Web Structure of Aphid-Parasitoid Populations on Plum Orchards in Chile
title_short Composition and Food Web Structure of Aphid-Parasitoid Populations on Plum Orchards in Chile
title_sort composition and food web structure of aphid-parasitoid populations on plum orchards in chile
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10051262/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36975973
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects14030288
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