Denno Robert F, Gruner Daniel S, Kaplan Ian
Department of Entomology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742 Deceased Department of Entomology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853.
J Nematol. 2008 Jun;40(2):61-72.
Entomopathogenic nematodes (EPN) are ubiquitous and generalized consumers of insects in soil food webs, occurring widely in natural and agricultural ecosystems on six continents. Augmentative releases of EPN have been used to enhance biological control of pests in agroecosystems. Pest managers strive to achieve a trophic cascade whereby natural-enemy effects permeate down through the food web to suppress host herbivores and increase crop production. Although trophic cascades have been studied in diverse aboveground arthropod-based systems, they are infrequently investigated in soil systems. Moreover, no overall quantitative assessment of the effectiveness of EPN in suppressing hosts with cascading benefits to plants has been made. Toward synthesizing the available but limited information on EPN and their ability to suppress prey and affect plant yield, we surveyed the literature and performed a meta-analysis of 35 published studies. Our analysis found that effect sizes for arthropod hosts as a result of EPN addition were consistently negative and indirect effects on plants were consistently positive. Results held across several different host metrics (abundance, fecundity and survival) and across measures of plant performance (biomass, growth, yield and survival). Moreover, the relationship between plant and host effect sizes was strikingly and significantly negative. That is, the positive impact on plant responses generally increased as the negative effect of EPN on hosts intensified, providing strong support for the mechanism of trophic cascades. We also review the ways in which EPN might interact antagonistically with each other and other predators and pathogens to adversely affect host suppression and dampen trophic cascades. We conclude that the food web implications of multiple-enemy interactions involving EPN are little studied, but, as management techniques that promote the long-term persistence of EPN are improved, antagonistic interactions are more likely to arise. We hope that the likely occurrence of antagonistic interactions in soil food webs should stimulate researchers to conduct field experiments explicitly designed to examine multiple-enemy interactions involving EPN and their cascading effects to hosts and plants.
昆虫病原线虫(EPN)是土壤食物网中普遍存在的昆虫广义消费者,广泛分布于六大洲的自然和农业生态系统中。释放EPN已被用于加强农业生态系统中害虫的生物防治。害虫管理者努力实现营养级联效应,即天敌的影响通过食物网向下渗透,以抑制寄主食草动物并提高作物产量。尽管在各种基于地上节肢动物的系统中已经对营养级联效应进行了研究,但在土壤系统中却很少进行调查。此外,尚未对EPN在抑制寄主从而给植物带来级联效益方面的有效性进行全面的定量评估。为了综合有关EPN及其抑制猎物和影响植物产量能力的现有但有限的信息,我们查阅了文献并对35项已发表的研究进行了荟萃分析。我们的分析发现,添加EPN对节肢动物寄主的效应大小始终为负,而对植物的间接效应始终为正。在几种不同的寄主指标(丰度、繁殖力和存活率)以及植物性能指标(生物量、生长、产量和存活率)中均得到了这样的结果。此外,植物和寄主效应大小之间的关系显著为负。也就是说,随着EPN对寄主的负面影响加剧,对植物反应的积极影响通常会增加,这为营养级联机制提供了有力支持。我们还回顾了EPN可能彼此之间以及与其他捕食者和病原体发生拮抗相互作用从而对寄主抑制产生不利影响并削弱营养级联效应的方式。我们得出结论,涉及EPN的多敌相互作用对食物网的影响研究较少,但是,随着促进EPN长期持续存在的管理技术得到改进,拮抗相互作用更有可能出现。我们希望土壤食物网中拮抗相互作用的可能发生能够促使研究人员开展专门设计的田间实验,以研究涉及EPN的多敌相互作用及其对寄主和植物的级联效应。