Indirect plant-mediated interactions between heterospecific parasitoids that develop in different caterpillar species

被引:0
|
作者
Maximilien A. C. Cuny
Romain Pierron
Rieta Gols
Erik H. Poelman
机构
[1] Wageningen University,Laboratory of Entomology
[2] Université de Haute-Alsace,Laboratoire Vigne Biotechnologies et Environnement
来源
Oecologia | 2023年 / 203卷
关键词
Tritrophic interactions; Induced plant response; Parasitoid performance; Parasitoid-mediated interactions; Indirect interaction network;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Parasitoids induce physiological changes in their herbivorous hosts that affect how plants respond to herbivory. The signature of parasitoids on induced plant responses to feeding by parasitized herbivores indirectly impacts insect communities interacting with the plant. The effect may extend to parasitoids and cause indirect interaction between parasitoids that develop inside different herbivore hosts sharing the food plant. However, this type of interactions among parasitoid larvae has received very little attention. In this study, we investigated sequential and simultaneous plant-mediated interactions among two host–parasitoid systems feeding on Brassica oleracea plants: Mamestra brassicae parasitized by Microplitis mediator and Pieris rapae parasitized by Cotesia rubecula. We measured the mortality, development time, and weight of unparasitized herbivores and performance of parasitoids that had developed inside the two herbivore species when sharing the food plant either simultaneously or sequentially. Plant induction by parasitized or unparasitized hosts had no significant effect on the performance of the two herbivore host species. In contrast, the two parasitoid species had asymmetrical indirect plant-mediated effects on each other’s performance. Cotesia rubecula weight was 15% higher on plants induced by M. mediator-parasitized hosts, compared to control plants. In addition, M. mediator development time was reduced by 30% on plants induced by conspecific but not heterospecific parasitoids, compared to plants induced by its unparasitized host. Contrary to sequential feeding, parasitoids had no effect on each other’s performance when feeding simultaneously. These results reveal that indirect plant-mediated interactions among parasitoid larvae could involve any parasitoid species whose hosts share a food plant.
引用
收藏
页码:311 / 321
页数:10
相关论文
共 11 条
  • [1] Indirect plant-mediated interactions between heterospecific parasitoids that develop in different caterpillar species
    Cuny, Maximilien A. C.
    Pierron, Romain
    Gols, Rieta
    Poelman, Erik H.
    OECOLOGIA, 2023, 203 (3-4) : 311 - 321
  • [2] Indirect plant-mediated interactions among parasitoid larvae
    Poelman, Erik H.
    Gols, Rieta
    Snoeren, Tjeerd A. L.
    Muru, David
    Smid, Hans M.
    Dicke, Marcel
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2011, 14 (07) : 670 - 676
  • [3] Parasitic wasp-associated symbiont affects plant-mediated species interactions between herbivores
    Cusumano, Antonino
    Zhu, Feng
    Volkoff, Anne-Nathalie
    Verbaarschot, Patrick
    Bloem, Janneke
    Vogel, Heiko
    Dicke, Marcel
    Poelman, Erik H.
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2018, 21 (07) : 957 - 967
  • [4] Endophyte-mediated tritrophic interactions between a grass-feeding caterpillar and two parasitoid species with different life histories
    Andrea J. Bixby-Brosi
    Daniel A. Potter
    Arthropod-Plant Interactions, 2012, 6 : 27 - 34
  • [5] Endophyte-mediated tritrophic interactions between a grass-feeding caterpillar and two parasitoid species with different life histories
    Bixby-Brosi, Andrea J.
    Potter, Daniel A.
    ARTHROPOD-PLANT INTERACTIONS, 2012, 6 (01) : 27 - 34
  • [6] Tritrophic interactions between parasitoids and cereal aphids are mediated by nitrogen fertilizer
    Aqueel, Muhammad A.
    Raza, Abu-bakar M.
    Balal, Rashad M.
    Shahid, Muhammad A.
    Mustafa, Irfan
    Javaid, Muhammad M.
    Leather, Simon R.
    INSECT SCIENCE, 2015, 22 (06) : 813 - 820
  • [7] Competition between the gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar, and the northern tiger swallowtail, Papilio canadensis: interactions mediated by host plant chemistry, pathogens, and parasitoids
    Ahnya M. Redman
    J. Mark Scriber
    Oecologia, 2000, 125 : 218 - 228
  • [8] Competition between the gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar, and the northern tiger swallowtail, Papilio canadensis:: interactions mediated by host plant chemistry, pathogens, and parasitoids
    Redman, AM
    Scriber, JM
    OECOLOGIA, 2000, 125 (02) : 218 - 228
  • [9] Insect predators affect plant resistance via density- and trait-mediated indirect interactions
    Griffin, CAM
    Thaler, JS
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2006, 9 (03) : 335 - 343
  • [10] Ecological trade-offs between jasmonic acid-dependent direct and indirect plant defences in tritrophic interactions
    Wei, Jianing
    Wang, Lizhong
    Zhao, Jiuhai
    Li, Chuanyou
    Ge, Feng
    Kang, Le
    NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2011, 189 (02) : 557 - 567