Keith Arthur R, Bailey Joseph K, Lau Matthew K, Whitham Thomas G
Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ 86011, USA
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996, USA
Proc Biol Sci. 2017 May 17;284(1854). doi: 10.1098/rspb.2016.2703.
We examined the hypothesis that genetics-based interactions between strongly interacting foundation species, the tree and the aphid , affect arthropod community diversity, stability and species interaction networks of which little is known. In a 2-year experimental manipulation of the tree and its aphid herbivore four major findings emerged: (i) the interactions of these two species determined the composition of an arthropod community of 139 species; (ii) both tree genotype and aphid presence significantly predicted community diversity; (iii) the presence of aphids on genetically susceptible trees increased the stability of arthropod communities across years; and (iv) the experimental removal of aphids affected community network structure (network degree, modularity and tree genotype contribution to modularity). These findings demonstrate that the interactions of foundation species are genetically based, which in turn significantly contributes to community diversity, stability and species interaction networks. These experiments provide an important step in understanding the evolution of Darwin's 'entangled bank', a metaphor that characterizes the complexity and interconnectedness of communities in the wild.
具有强相互作用的基础物种(树木和蚜虫)之间基于遗传的相互作用,会影响节肢动物群落的多样性、稳定性以及鲜为人知的物种相互作用网络。在对树木及其蚜虫食草动物进行的为期两年的实验操作中,出现了四个主要发现:(i)这两个物种的相互作用决定了一个由139个物种组成的节肢动物群落的组成;(ii)树木基因型和蚜虫的存在都能显著预测群落多样性;(iii)在基因易感性树木上蚜虫的存在增加了多年来节肢动物群落的稳定性;(iv)实验性去除蚜虫影响了群落网络结构(网络度、模块性以及树木基因型对模块性的贡献)。这些发现表明基础物种的相互作用是基于遗传的,这反过来又显著促进了群落多样性、稳定性和物种相互作用网络。这些实验为理解达尔文的“纠结的河岸”的进化迈出了重要一步,“纠结的河岸”是一个比喻,描绘了野外群落的复杂性和相互关联性。