Burger Jutta C, Louda Svata M
School of Biological Sciences and Cedar Point Biological Station, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 68588-0343, Lincoln, NE, USA.
Oecologia. 1994 Sep;99(1-2):79-87. doi: 10.1007/BF00317086.
Variation in plant performance between microhabitats is usually attributed to direct mechanisms, such as plant physiological tolerances or competitive interactions. However, indirect mechanisms, such as differences in herbivore pressure mediated by microhabitat differences, could create the same pattern of variation. In this study, we investigated the effect of insect herbivore pressure on the growth of the grassland cactus Opuntia fragilis under different regimes of grassland canopy cover. Our purpose was to establish the extent to which canopy cover plays a direct, competitive role versus an indirect, mediatory role in cactus growth. We manipulated aboveground microhabitat, specifically the cover of adjacent grasses. The three treatments were: (1) open canopy, with grass pinned down away from the cactus; (2) shaded canopy, with a partial mesh cage staked over the cactus; and (3) ambient grass canopy. We measured seasonal plant growth and recorded changes in insect herbivore occurrence and damage in relation to cover. Cactus growth, defined as the change in number of live cladodes, was higher in the open than under either treatment where the plant was more shaded (P<0.05). However, allocation to new growth, measured as the proportion of new segments (cladodes) in a patch, did not differ among cover treatments. Thus, the hypothesis that physiological constraints, or competition for light, limited cactus performance in grass is rejected. Instead, we found that both cladode mortality, caused by the larvae of a cactus moth borer (Melitara dentata), and occurrence of the moth were lower in the open microhabitat than in either shaded microhabitat. Thus, higher net growth in the open, unshaded treatment, rather than representing a release from competition for light with grasses, was better explained as an indirect effect of grass cover on the activity and impact of the cactus moth. These results show that indirect effects can lead to a misinterpretation of experimental data on direct effects. These data also contribute to an improved understanding of mixed results in the biological control of weedy cacti. Clearly, future evaluations of the relative importance of physiology, competition, and insect herbivory in plant performance must be environmentally explicit.
微生境间植物表现的差异通常归因于直接机制,如植物生理耐受性或竞争相互作用。然而,间接机制,如由微生境差异介导的食草动物压力差异,也可能产生相同的变异模式。在本研究中,我们调查了在不同草地冠层覆盖度条件下,昆虫食草动物压力对草原仙人掌脆弱仙人掌生长的影响。我们的目的是确定冠层覆盖在仙人掌生长中起直接竞争作用还是间接介导作用的程度。我们对地上微生境进行了操控,具体是相邻草的覆盖度。三种处理方式为:(1)开阔冠层,将草固定在远离仙人掌的地方;(2)遮荫冠层,在仙人掌上方竖起部分网状笼子;(3)自然草冠层。我们测量了季节性植物生长,并记录了与覆盖度相关的昆虫食草动物出现情况和损害变化。以活茎节数量变化定义的仙人掌生长,在开阔环境中高于植物遮荫程度更高的任何一种处理方式(P<0.05)。然而,以斑块中新茎节(茎节)比例衡量的新生长分配在不同覆盖度处理间并无差异。因此,生理限制或对光照的竞争限制了仙人掌在草丛中表现的假设被否定。相反,我们发现由仙人掌蛾幼虫(Melitara dentata)导致的茎节死亡率以及蛾的出现情况,在开阔微生境中都低于任何一种遮荫微生境。因此,开阔、无遮荫处理中更高的净生长,并非代表与草竞争光照的解除,更好的解释是草覆盖度对仙人掌蛾活动和影响的间接效应。这些结果表明间接效应可能导致对直接效应实验数据的错误解读。这些数据也有助于更好地理解杂草仙人掌生物防治中的混合结果。显然,未来对生理学、竞争和昆虫食草作用在植物表现中相对重要性的评估必须考虑环境因素。