Egan Scott P, Ott James R
Population and Conservation Biology Program, Department of Biology, Texas State University, San Marcos, Texas 78666, USA.
Ecology. 2007 Nov;88(11):2868-79. doi: 10.1890/06-1303.1.
Herein we report results of transplant experiments that link variation in host plant quality to herbivore fitness at the local scale (among adjacent plants) with the process of local (demic) adaptation at the landscape scale to explain the observed distribution of the specialist gall former Belonocnema treatae (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae) within populations of its host plant, Quercus fusiformis. Field surveys show that leaf gall densities vary by orders of magnitude among adjacent trees and that high-gall-density trees are both rare (< 5%) and patchily distributed. B. treatae from each of five high-gall-density trees were reared on (1) the four nearest low-gall-density trees, (2) the four alternative high-gall-density trees, and (3) their natal trees (control). Each treatment (source X rearing site) was replicated three times. Nine components of performance that sequentially contribute to fitness were evaluated with over 21000 galls censused across the 25 experimental trees. When reared on their natal trees and compared with low-gall-density neighbors, transplanted gall formers had higher gall initiation success (P < 0.05), produced more (P < 0.001) and larger galls (P < 0.001), and produced a higher proportion of galls that exceeded the threshold size for natural enemy avoidance (P < 0.05). Comparison of gall-former performance on natal vs. alternative high-gall-density trees demonstrated significant (P < 0.001) differences in six performance measures with five differing in the direction predicted by the hypothesis of local adaptation. Overall, these linked experiments document direct and indirect effects of host plant variation on gall-former performance and demonstrate convincingly that (1) high-gall-density trees equate to high-quality trees that are surrounded by trees of relatively lower quality to the herbivore and (2) gall-former populations have become locally adapted to individual trees.
在此,我们报告了移植实验的结果,该实验将局部尺度(相邻植物之间)宿主植物质量的变化与草食动物适合度联系起来,并结合景观尺度上的局部(种群)适应过程,以解释专性瘿蜂Belonocnema treatae(膜翅目:瘿蜂科)在其宿主植物梭形栎种群中的观察分布。野外调查表明,相邻树木间的叶瘿密度相差几个数量级,且高瘿密度的树木既稀少(<5%)又呈斑块状分布。从五棵高瘿密度树木上采集的B. treatae在以下三种情况下饲养:(1)四棵最近的低瘿密度树木;(2)四棵其他的高瘿密度树木;(3)其出生树(对照)。每种处理(来源×饲养地点)重复三次。通过对25棵实验树的21000多个瘿进行统计,评估了依次影响适合度的九个性能组成部分。当在其出生树上饲养并与低瘿密度的相邻树木相比时,移植的瘿蜂形成者有更高的瘿起始成功率(P < 0.05),产生更多(P < 0.001)且更大的瘿(P < 0.001),并且产生超过天敌回避阈值大小的瘿的比例更高(P < 0.05)。将瘿蜂形成者在出生树与其他高瘿密度树木上的性能进行比较,结果表明在六项性能指标上存在显著差异(P < 0.001),其中五项的差异方向符合局部适应假说的预测。总体而言,这些相关实验记录了宿主植物变异对瘿蜂形成者性能的直接和间接影响,并令人信服地证明:(1)高瘿密度的树木等同于高质量的树木,周围是对草食动物而言质量相对较低的树木;(2)瘿蜂形成者种群已在局部上适应了个体树木。