Direction de la Recherche Forestière, Ministère des Forêts, de la Faune et des Parcs du Québec, 2700 rue Einstein, Québec, QC, G1P 3W8, Canada.
Canadian Forest Service, Laurentian Forestry Centre, Natural Resources Canada, PO Box 10380, Stn. Ste Foy, Quebec, QC, G1V 4C4, Canada.
Ecology. 2018 Sep;99(9):2047-2057. doi: 10.1002/ecy.2417. Epub 2018 Jul 30.
Understanding the causal pathways through which forest insect outbreaks are triggered is important for resource managers. However, detailed population dynamics studies are hard to conduct in low-density, pre-outbreak populations because the insects are difficult to sample in sufficient numbers. Using laboratory-raised larvae installed in the field across a 1,000 km east-west gradient in Québec (Canada) over an 11-yr period, we examined if parasitism and predation were likely to explain fluctuations in low-density spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana; SBW) populations. Parasitism rates by the two main larval parasitoid species, Elachertus cacoeciae and Tranosema rostrale, peaked during different years. This suggests that temporal fluctuations in overall parasitism were partly buffered by compensatory dynamics among parasitoid species. Still, spatial covariance analyses indicate that the residual interannual variation in parasitism rates was substantial and correlated over large distances (up to 700 km). On the other hand, interannual variation in predation rates was not spatially correlated. Piecewise structural equation models indicate that temporal variation in parasitism and predation does not influence temporal variation in wild SBW abundance. Spatially, however, SBWs installed in warmer locations tended to show higher parasitism rates, and these higher rates correlated with lower wild SBW population levels. Overall, the results indicate that large-scale drops in parasitism occur and could potentially contribute to SBW population increases. However, during the period covered by this study, other factors such as direct effects of weather on SBW larval development or indirect effects through host tree physiology or phenology were more likely to explain large-scale variation in wild SBW populations.
了解森林虫害爆发的因果途径对于资源管理者来说很重要。然而,在低密度的爆发前种群中进行详细的种群动态研究是困难的,因为昆虫很难以足够的数量进行采样。在 11 年的时间里,我们使用在实验室中饲养的幼虫,在横跨加拿大魁北克省 1000 公里的东西梯度的野外进行安装,研究寄生和捕食是否可能解释低密度云杉芽虫(Choristoneura fumiferana;SBW)种群的波动。两种主要的幼虫寄生蜂,Elachertus cacoeciae 和 Tranosema rostrale 的寄生率在不同年份达到峰值。这表明总体寄生率的时间波动部分被寄生物种之间的补偿动态缓冲。尽管如此,空间协方差分析表明,寄生率的残留年际变化仍然很大,并且在很大的距离上(高达 700 公里)存在相关性。另一方面,捕食率的年际变化在空间上没有相关性。分段结构方程模型表明,寄生和捕食的时间变化不会影响野生 SBW 丰度的时间变化。然而,在空间上,安装在温暖地区的 SBW 往往表现出更高的寄生率,并且这些更高的寄生率与较低的野生 SBW 种群水平相关。总体而言,结果表明大规模的寄生率下降确实发生了,并且可能有助于 SBW 种群的增加。然而,在本研究涵盖的时期内,其他因素,如天气对 SBW 幼虫发育的直接影响或通过宿主树生理学或物候学的间接影响,更有可能解释野生 SBW 种群的大规模变化。