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Community impacts of anthropogenic disturbance: natural enemies exploit multiple routes in pursuit of invading herbivore hosts

BACKGROUND: Biological invasions provide a window on the process of community assembly. In particular, tracking natural enemy recruitment to invading hosts can reveal the relative roles of co-evolution (including local adaptation) and ecological sorting. We use molecular data to examine colonisation...

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Autores principales: Nicholls, James A, Fuentes-Utrilla, Pablo, Hayward, Alexander, Melika, George, Csóka, György, Nieves-Aldrey, José-Luis, Pujade-Villar, Juli, Tavakoli, Majid, Schönrogge, Karsten, Stone, Graham N
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2974729/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20969799
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-10-322
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author Nicholls, James A
Fuentes-Utrilla, Pablo
Hayward, Alexander
Melika, George
Csóka, György
Nieves-Aldrey, José-Luis
Pujade-Villar, Juli
Tavakoli, Majid
Schönrogge, Karsten
Stone, Graham N
author_facet Nicholls, James A
Fuentes-Utrilla, Pablo
Hayward, Alexander
Melika, George
Csóka, György
Nieves-Aldrey, José-Luis
Pujade-Villar, Juli
Tavakoli, Majid
Schönrogge, Karsten
Stone, Graham N
author_sort Nicholls, James A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Biological invasions provide a window on the process of community assembly. In particular, tracking natural enemy recruitment to invading hosts can reveal the relative roles of co-evolution (including local adaptation) and ecological sorting. We use molecular data to examine colonisation of northern Europe by the parasitoid Megastigmus stigmatizans following invasions of its herbivorous oak gallwasp hosts from the Balkans. Local host adaptation predicts that invading gallwasp populations will have been tracked primarily by sympatric Balkan populations of M. stigmatizans (Host Pursuit Hypothesis). Alternatively, ecological sorting allows parasitoid recruitment from geographically distinct populations with no recent experience of the invading hosts (Host Shift Hypothesis). Finally, we test for long-term persistence of parasitoids introduced via human trade of their hosts' galls (Introduction Hypothesis). RESULTS: Polymorphism diagnostic of different southern refugial regions was present in both mitochondrial and nuclear microsatellite markers, allowing us to identify the origins of northern European invaded range M. stigmatizans populations. As with their hosts, some invaded range populations showed genetic variation diagnostic of Balkan sources, supporting the Host Pursuit Hypothesis. In contrast, other invading populations had an Iberian origin, unlike their hosts in northern Europe, supporting the Host Shift Hypothesis. Finally, both British and Italian M. stigmatizans populations show signatures compatible with the Introduction Hypothesis from eastern Mediterranean sources. CONCLUSIONS: These data reveal the continental scale of multi-trophic impacts of anthropogenic disturbance and highlight the fact that herbivores and their natural enemies may face very different constraints on range expansion. The ability of natural enemies to exploit ecologically-similar hosts with which they have had no historical association supports a major role for ecological sorting processes in the recent assembly of these communities. The multitude of origins of invading natural enemy populations in this study emphasises the diversity of mechanisms requiring consideration when predicting consequences of other biological invasions or biological control introductions.
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spelling pubmed-29747292010-11-06 Community impacts of anthropogenic disturbance: natural enemies exploit multiple routes in pursuit of invading herbivore hosts Nicholls, James A Fuentes-Utrilla, Pablo Hayward, Alexander Melika, George Csóka, György Nieves-Aldrey, José-Luis Pujade-Villar, Juli Tavakoli, Majid Schönrogge, Karsten Stone, Graham N BMC Evol Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: Biological invasions provide a window on the process of community assembly. In particular, tracking natural enemy recruitment to invading hosts can reveal the relative roles of co-evolution (including local adaptation) and ecological sorting. We use molecular data to examine colonisation of northern Europe by the parasitoid Megastigmus stigmatizans following invasions of its herbivorous oak gallwasp hosts from the Balkans. Local host adaptation predicts that invading gallwasp populations will have been tracked primarily by sympatric Balkan populations of M. stigmatizans (Host Pursuit Hypothesis). Alternatively, ecological sorting allows parasitoid recruitment from geographically distinct populations with no recent experience of the invading hosts (Host Shift Hypothesis). Finally, we test for long-term persistence of parasitoids introduced via human trade of their hosts' galls (Introduction Hypothesis). RESULTS: Polymorphism diagnostic of different southern refugial regions was present in both mitochondrial and nuclear microsatellite markers, allowing us to identify the origins of northern European invaded range M. stigmatizans populations. As with their hosts, some invaded range populations showed genetic variation diagnostic of Balkan sources, supporting the Host Pursuit Hypothesis. In contrast, other invading populations had an Iberian origin, unlike their hosts in northern Europe, supporting the Host Shift Hypothesis. Finally, both British and Italian M. stigmatizans populations show signatures compatible with the Introduction Hypothesis from eastern Mediterranean sources. CONCLUSIONS: These data reveal the continental scale of multi-trophic impacts of anthropogenic disturbance and highlight the fact that herbivores and their natural enemies may face very different constraints on range expansion. The ability of natural enemies to exploit ecologically-similar hosts with which they have had no historical association supports a major role for ecological sorting processes in the recent assembly of these communities. The multitude of origins of invading natural enemy populations in this study emphasises the diversity of mechanisms requiring consideration when predicting consequences of other biological invasions or biological control introductions. BioMed Central 2010-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC2974729/ /pubmed/20969799 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-10-322 Text en Copyright ©2010 Nicholls et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nicholls, James A
Fuentes-Utrilla, Pablo
Hayward, Alexander
Melika, George
Csóka, György
Nieves-Aldrey, José-Luis
Pujade-Villar, Juli
Tavakoli, Majid
Schönrogge, Karsten
Stone, Graham N
Community impacts of anthropogenic disturbance: natural enemies exploit multiple routes in pursuit of invading herbivore hosts
title Community impacts of anthropogenic disturbance: natural enemies exploit multiple routes in pursuit of invading herbivore hosts
title_full Community impacts of anthropogenic disturbance: natural enemies exploit multiple routes in pursuit of invading herbivore hosts
title_fullStr Community impacts of anthropogenic disturbance: natural enemies exploit multiple routes in pursuit of invading herbivore hosts
title_full_unstemmed Community impacts of anthropogenic disturbance: natural enemies exploit multiple routes in pursuit of invading herbivore hosts
title_short Community impacts of anthropogenic disturbance: natural enemies exploit multiple routes in pursuit of invading herbivore hosts
title_sort community impacts of anthropogenic disturbance: natural enemies exploit multiple routes in pursuit of invading herbivore hosts
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2974729/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20969799
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-10-322
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