Messina Frank J
Section of Ecology and Systematics, Cornell University, 14853, Ithaca, NY, USA.
Oecologia. 1982 Dec;55(3):342-354. doi: 10.1007/BF00376922.
The leaf beetles Trirhabda borealis and T. virgata are specialist herbivores of meadow goldenrods, Solidago spp., in central New York. Upon emergence, both larvae and adults must actively search for food plants, and must choose among the five goldenrod species (S. canadensis, S. gigantea, S. graminifolia, S. juncea and S. rugosa) that co-occur in old fields. The relationship between Trihabda foraging decisions and plant quality was examined by comparing food preferences in the field with the performance of beetles caged on each host. Trirhabda adults were highly selective in their use of food plants. Adults of T. borealis preferred a single host, S. canadensis, while T. virgata adults were most common on S. canadensis and S. gigantea. These preferences were not strictly related to variation in plant quality. In the laboratory, T. borealis performed equally well on four goldenrods (but completely failed to reproduce when fed S. graminifolia), and T. virgata performed equally well on all five hosts.Larval feeding preferences in each beetle species were broader, and were more in accord with subtle variation in plant quality. Newly-hatched T. borealis larvae readily colonized four hosts and rejected only S. graminifolia, which conferred the lowest survivorship and the slowest growth. Larvae of T. virgata accepted each host, even though growth rates were somewhat slower on S. graminifolia and S. juncea.Ontogenetic differences in host preference and host tolerance may have evolved because of the different host-finding abilities of each beetle stage. During host search, the sluggish, newly-emerged larvae may be more food-limited and accept even marginally inferior food plants. The relatively mobile adults are more discriminating and use a subset of suitable hosts. The intermingled dispersion of Solidago species in old fields results in frequent larval colonization of hosts seldom used by adults. In diverse plant communities, ultimate patterns of food plant choice can be a complex function of at least three factors: intrinisic plant quality, local plant dispersion, and the host-search abilities of the insect forager.
叶甲Trirhabda borealis和T. virgata是纽约州中部草地一枝黄花(Solidago spp.)的专食性食草动物。幼虫和成虫羽化后都必须积极寻找食物植物,并且必须在老田野中共存的五种一枝黄花物种(加拿大一枝黄花、巨花一枝黄花、禾叶一枝黄花、灯芯草叶一枝黄花和皱叶一枝黄花)中进行选择。通过比较野外的食物偏好与关在每种寄主上的叶甲的表现,研究了Trirhabda的觅食决策与植物质量之间的关系。Trirhabda成虫在食物植物的选择上具有高度选择性。T. borealis成虫偏好单一寄主加拿大一枝黄花,而T. virgata成虫在加拿大一枝黄花和巨花一枝黄花上最为常见。这些偏好与植物质量的变化并不严格相关。在实验室中,T. borealis在四种一枝黄花上的表现同样良好(但以禾叶一枝黄花为食时完全无法繁殖),而T. virgata在所有五种寄主上的表现同样良好。每种叶甲幼虫的取食偏好更为广泛,并且更符合植物质量的细微差异。刚孵化的T. borealis幼虫很容易在四种寄主上定殖,只拒食禾叶一枝黄花,因为它的存活率最低且生长最慢。T. virgata的幼虫接受每种寄主,尽管在禾叶一枝黄花和灯芯草叶一枝黄花上的生长速度稍慢。寄主偏好和寄主耐受性的个体发育差异可能是由于每个叶甲阶段寻找寄主的能力不同而进化而来的。在寻找寄主的过程中,行动迟缓、新羽化的幼虫可能食物限制更大,甚至会接受质量稍差的食物植物。相对活跃的成虫则更具辨别力,会选择一部分合适的寄主。一枝黄花物种在老田野中混合分布,导致幼虫经常定殖在成虫很少使用的寄主上。在多样化的植物群落中,食物植物选择的最终模式可能是至少三个因素的复杂函数:植物内在质量、当地植物分布以及昆虫觅食者寻找寄主的能力。