Cargando…

Species‐specific plant‐mediated effects between herbivores converge at high damage intensity

Plants are often exposed to multiple herbivores and densities of these attackers (or corresponding damage intensities) often fluctuate greatly in the field. Plant‐mediated interactions vary among herbivore species and with changing feeding intensity, but little is known about how herbivore identity...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wan, Jinlong, Yi, Jiahui, Tao, Zhibin, Ren, Zhikun, Otieno, Evans O., Tian, Baoliang, Ding, Jianqing, Siemann, Evan, Erb, Matthias, Huang, Wei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9285418/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35072958
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3647
_version_ 1784747775366266880
author Wan, Jinlong
Yi, Jiahui
Tao, Zhibin
Ren, Zhikun
Otieno, Evans O.
Tian, Baoliang
Ding, Jianqing
Siemann, Evan
Erb, Matthias
Huang, Wei
author_facet Wan, Jinlong
Yi, Jiahui
Tao, Zhibin
Ren, Zhikun
Otieno, Evans O.
Tian, Baoliang
Ding, Jianqing
Siemann, Evan
Erb, Matthias
Huang, Wei
author_sort Wan, Jinlong
collection PubMed
description Plants are often exposed to multiple herbivores and densities of these attackers (or corresponding damage intensities) often fluctuate greatly in the field. Plant‐mediated interactions vary among herbivore species and with changing feeding intensity, but little is known about how herbivore identity and density interact to determine plant responses and herbivore fitness. Here, we investigated this question using Triadica sebifera (tallow) and two common and abundant specialist insect herbivores, Bikasha collaris (flea beetle) and Heterapoderopsis bicallosicollis (weevil). By manipulating densities of leaf‐feeding adults of these two herbivore species, we tested how variations in the intensity of leaf damage caused by flea beetle or weevil adults affected the performance of root‐feeding flea beetle larvae and evaluated the potential of induced tallow root traits to predict flea beetle larval performance. We found that weevil adults consistently decreased the survival of flea beetle larvae with increasing leaf damage intensities. In contrast, conspecific flea beetle adults increased their larval survival at low damage then decreased larval survival at high damage, resulting in a unimodal pattern. Chemical analyses showed that increasing leaf damage from weevil adults linearly decreased root carbohydrates and increased root tannin, whereas flea beetle adults had opposite effects as weevil adults at low damage and similar effects as them at high damage. Furthermore, across all feeding treatments, flea beetle larval survival correlated positively with concentrations of carbohydrates and negatively with concentration of tannin, suggesting that root primary and secondary metabolism might underlie the observed effects on flea beetle larvae. Our study demonstrates that herbivore identity and density interact to determine systemic plant responses and plant‐mediated effects on herbivores. In particular, effects are species‐specific at low densities, but converge at high densities. These findings emphasize the importance of considering herbivore identity and density simultaneously when investigating factors driving plant‐mediated interactions between herbivores, which advances our understanding of the structure and composition of herbivore communities and terrestrial food webs.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9285418
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-92854182022-07-18 Species‐specific plant‐mediated effects between herbivores converge at high damage intensity Wan, Jinlong Yi, Jiahui Tao, Zhibin Ren, Zhikun Otieno, Evans O. Tian, Baoliang Ding, Jianqing Siemann, Evan Erb, Matthias Huang, Wei Ecology Articles Plants are often exposed to multiple herbivores and densities of these attackers (or corresponding damage intensities) often fluctuate greatly in the field. Plant‐mediated interactions vary among herbivore species and with changing feeding intensity, but little is known about how herbivore identity and density interact to determine plant responses and herbivore fitness. Here, we investigated this question using Triadica sebifera (tallow) and two common and abundant specialist insect herbivores, Bikasha collaris (flea beetle) and Heterapoderopsis bicallosicollis (weevil). By manipulating densities of leaf‐feeding adults of these two herbivore species, we tested how variations in the intensity of leaf damage caused by flea beetle or weevil adults affected the performance of root‐feeding flea beetle larvae and evaluated the potential of induced tallow root traits to predict flea beetle larval performance. We found that weevil adults consistently decreased the survival of flea beetle larvae with increasing leaf damage intensities. In contrast, conspecific flea beetle adults increased their larval survival at low damage then decreased larval survival at high damage, resulting in a unimodal pattern. Chemical analyses showed that increasing leaf damage from weevil adults linearly decreased root carbohydrates and increased root tannin, whereas flea beetle adults had opposite effects as weevil adults at low damage and similar effects as them at high damage. Furthermore, across all feeding treatments, flea beetle larval survival correlated positively with concentrations of carbohydrates and negatively with concentration of tannin, suggesting that root primary and secondary metabolism might underlie the observed effects on flea beetle larvae. Our study demonstrates that herbivore identity and density interact to determine systemic plant responses and plant‐mediated effects on herbivores. In particular, effects are species‐specific at low densities, but converge at high densities. These findings emphasize the importance of considering herbivore identity and density simultaneously when investigating factors driving plant‐mediated interactions between herbivores, which advances our understanding of the structure and composition of herbivore communities and terrestrial food webs. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2022-03-21 2022-05 /pmc/articles/PMC9285418/ /pubmed/35072958 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3647 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Ecology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The Ecological Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Articles
Wan, Jinlong
Yi, Jiahui
Tao, Zhibin
Ren, Zhikun
Otieno, Evans O.
Tian, Baoliang
Ding, Jianqing
Siemann, Evan
Erb, Matthias
Huang, Wei
Species‐specific plant‐mediated effects between herbivores converge at high damage intensity
title Species‐specific plant‐mediated effects between herbivores converge at high damage intensity
title_full Species‐specific plant‐mediated effects between herbivores converge at high damage intensity
title_fullStr Species‐specific plant‐mediated effects between herbivores converge at high damage intensity
title_full_unstemmed Species‐specific plant‐mediated effects between herbivores converge at high damage intensity
title_short Species‐specific plant‐mediated effects between herbivores converge at high damage intensity
title_sort species‐specific plant‐mediated effects between herbivores converge at high damage intensity
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9285418/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35072958
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3647
work_keys_str_mv AT wanjinlong speciesspecificplantmediatedeffectsbetweenherbivoresconvergeathighdamageintensity
AT yijiahui speciesspecificplantmediatedeffectsbetweenherbivoresconvergeathighdamageintensity
AT taozhibin speciesspecificplantmediatedeffectsbetweenherbivoresconvergeathighdamageintensity
AT renzhikun speciesspecificplantmediatedeffectsbetweenherbivoresconvergeathighdamageintensity
AT otienoevanso speciesspecificplantmediatedeffectsbetweenherbivoresconvergeathighdamageintensity
AT tianbaoliang speciesspecificplantmediatedeffectsbetweenherbivoresconvergeathighdamageintensity
AT dingjianqing speciesspecificplantmediatedeffectsbetweenherbivoresconvergeathighdamageintensity
AT siemannevan speciesspecificplantmediatedeffectsbetweenherbivoresconvergeathighdamageintensity
AT erbmatthias speciesspecificplantmediatedeffectsbetweenherbivoresconvergeathighdamageintensity
AT huangwei speciesspecificplantmediatedeffectsbetweenherbivoresconvergeathighdamageintensity