Distribution and colonisation ability of three parasitoids and their herbivorous host in a fragmented landscape

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_1506838E0D35
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Distribution and colonisation ability of three parasitoids and their herbivorous host in a fragmented landscape
Journal
Basic and Applied Ecology
Author(s)
Elzinga Jelmer A., van Nouhuys Saskya, van Leeuwen Dirk-Jan, Biere Arjen
ISSN
1439-1791
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/2007
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
8
Number
1
Pages
75-88
Language
english
Abstract
Habitat fragmentation can disrupt communities of interacting species even if only some of the species are directly affected by fragmentation. For instance, if parasitoids disperse less well than their herbivorous hosts, habitat fragmentation may lead to higher herbivory in isolated plant patches due to the absence of the third trophic level. Community-level studies suggest that parasitoids tend to have limited dispersal abilities, on the order of tens of metres, much smaller than that of their hosts, while species-oriented studies document dispersal by parasitoids on the scale of kilometres. In this study the distribution patterns of three parasitoid species with different life histories and their moth host, Hadena bicruris, a specialist herbivore of Silene latifolia, were compared in a large-scale network of natural fragmented plant patches along the rivers Rhine and Waal in the Netherlands. We examined how patch size and isolation affect the presence of each species. Additionally, experimental plots were used to study the colonisation abilities of the species at different distances from source populations.
In the natural plant patches the presence of the herbivore and two of the parasitoids, the gregarious specialist Microplitis tristis and the gregarious generalist Bracon variator were not affected by patch isolation at the scale of the study, while the solitary specialist Eurylabus tristis was. In contrast to the herbivore, the presence of all parasitoid species declined with plant patch size. The colonisation experiment confirmed that the herbivore and M. tristis are good dispersers, able to travel at least 2 km within a season. B. variator showed intermediate colonisation ability and E. tristis showed very limited colonisation ability at this spatial scale. Characteristics of parasitoid species that may contribute to differences in their dispersal abilities are discussed.
Keywords
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, dispersal, connectivity, habitat fragmentation, tri-trophic interactions, Silene latifolia, Hadena bicruris
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Create date
19/11/2007 10:35
Last modification date
20/08/2019 13:43
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