High nymphal host density and mortality negatively impact parasitoid complex during an insect herbivore outbreak

被引:8
|
作者
Hall, Aidan A. G. [1 ]
Johnson, Scott N. [1 ]
Cook, James M. [1 ]
Riegler, Markus [1 ]
机构
[1] Western Sydney Univ, Hawkesbury Inst Environm, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith, NSW 2751, Australia
关键词
density-dependent mortality; insect outbreak; psyllid; synchronization; temperature; trophic interactions; RIEK HYMENOPTERA; NATURAL ENEMIES; CEREAL APHIDS; LIFE-HISTORY; HEMIPTERA; DYNAMICS; TEMPERATURE; ENCYRTIDAE; DEPENDENCE; RESPONSES;
D O I
10.1111/1744-7917.12532
中图分类号
Q96 [昆虫学];
学科分类号
摘要
Insect herbivore outbreaks frequently occur and this may be due to factors that restrict top-down control by parasitoids, for example, host-parasitoid asynchrony, hyperparasitization, resource limitation and climate. Few studies have examined host-parasitoid density relationships during an insect herbivore outbreak in a natural ecosystem with diverse parasitoids. We studied parasitization patterns of Cardiaspina psyllids during an outbreak in a Eucalyptus woodland. First, we established the trophic roles of the parasitoids through a species-specific multiplex PCR approach on mummies from which parasitoids emerged. Then, we assessed host-parasitoid density relationships across three spatial scales (leaf, tree and site) over one year. We detected four endoparasitoid species of the family Encyrtidae (Hymenoptera); two primary parasitoid and one heteronomous hyperparasitoid Psyllaephagus species (the latter with female development as a primary parasitoid and male development as a hyperparasitoid), and the hyperparasitoid Coccidoctonus psyllae. Parasitoid development was host-synchronized, although synchrony between sites appeared constrained during winter (due to temperature differences). Parasitization was predominantly driven by one primary parasitoid species and was mostly inversely host-density dependent across the spatial scales. Hyperparasitization by C. psyllae was psyllid-density dependent at the site scale, however, this only impacted the rarer primary parasitoid. High larval parasitoid mortality due to density-dependent nymphal psyllid mortality (a consequence of resource limitation) compounded by a summer heat wave was incorporated in the assessment and resulted in density independence of host-parasitoid relationships. As such, high larval parasitoid mortality during insect herbivore outbreaks may contribute to the absence of host density-dependent parasitization during outbreak events.
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页码:351 / 365
页数:15
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