Department of Plant Protection Biology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Alnarp, Sweden.
FARCE Laboratory, Institute of Biology, University of Neuchâtel, Neuchâtel, Switzerland.
Glob Chang Biol. 2018 Feb;24(2):631-643. doi: 10.1111/gcb.13836. Epub 2017 Sep 1.
Global climatic changes may lead to the arrival of multiple range-expanding species from different trophic levels into new habitats, either simultaneously or in quick succession, potentially causing the introduction of manifold novel interactions into native food webs. Unraveling the complex biotic interactions between native and range-expanding species is critical to understand the impact of climate change on community ecology, but experimental evidence is lacking. In a series of laboratory experiments that simulated direct and indirect species interactions, we investigated the effects of the concurrent arrival of a range-expanding insect herbivore in Europe, Spodoptera littoralis, and its associated parasitoid Microplitis rufiventris, on the native herbivore Mamestra brassicae, and its associated parasitoid Microplitis mediator, when co-occurring on a native plant, Brassica rapa. Overall, direct interactions between the herbivores were beneficial for the exotic herbivore (higher pupal weight than the native herbivore), and negative for the native herbivore (higher mortality than the exotic herbivore). At the third trophic level, both parasitoids were unable to parasitize the herbivore they did not coexist with, but the presence of the exotic parasitoid still negatively affected the native herbivore (increased mortality) and the native parasitoid (decreased parasitism rate), through failed parasitism attempts and interference effects. Our results suggest different interaction scenarios depending on whether S. littoralis and its parasitoid arrive to the native tritrophic system separately or concurrently, as the negative effects associated with the presence of the parasitoid were dependent on the presence of the exotic herbivore. These findings illustrate the complexity and interconnectedness of multitrophic changes resulting from concurrent species arrival to new environments, and the need for integrating the ecological effects of such arrivals into the general theoretical framework of global invasion patterns driven by climatic change.
全球气候变化可能导致来自不同营养级的多种扩布种同时或快速相继进入新栖息地,从而有可能将多种新的相互作用引入到本地食物网中。揭示本地种和扩布种之间复杂的生物相互作用对于理解气候变化对群落生态学的影响至关重要,但目前缺乏实验证据。在一系列模拟直接和间接物种相互作用的实验室实验中,我们研究了当一种在欧洲扩布的昆虫食草动物——小地老虎(Spodoptera littoralis)及其相关寄生蜂——小眼绿腹食蝇(Microplitis rufiventris)同时到达时,对本地食草动物——菜蛾(Mamestra brassicae)及其相关寄生蜂——小菜蛾绒茧蜂(Microplitis mediator)的影响,这些本地种和扩布种同时存在于一种本地植物——油菜(Brassica rapa)上。总的来说,食草动物之间的直接相互作用有利于外来食草动物(蛹重高于本地食草动物),而不利于本地食草动物(死亡率高于外来食草动物)。在第三营养级,两种寄生蜂都无法寄生它们没有共同存在的食草动物,但外来寄生蜂的存在仍然通过寄生失败和干扰效应对本地食草动物(死亡率增加)和本地寄生蜂(寄生率降低)产生负面影响。我们的研究结果表明,根据 S. littoralis 和它的寄生蜂是单独到达还是同时到达本地的三营养级系统,会出现不同的相互作用情景,因为与寄生蜂存在相关的负面影响取决于外来食草动物的存在。这些发现说明了由于同时有物种到达新环境而导致的多营养级变化的复杂性和相互关联性,以及需要将这种到达对生态的影响纳入到由气候变化驱动的全球入侵模式的一般理论框架中。