Šigut Martin, Šigutová Hana, Šipoš Jan, Pyszko Petr, Kotásková Nela, Drozd Pavel
Department of Biology and Ecology University of Ostrava Ostrava Czech Republic.
Institute of Environmental Technologies University of Ostrava Ostrava Czech Republic.
Ecol Evol. 2018 Jun 27;8(15):7297-7311. doi: 10.1002/ece3.4194. eCollection 2018 Aug.
Knowledge about herbivores and their parasitoids in forest canopies remains limited, despite their diversity and ecological importance. Thus, it is important to understand the factors that shape the herbivore-parasitoid community structure, particularly the effect of vertical gradient. We investigated a quantitative community dataset of exposed and semiconcealed leaf-chewing larvae and their parasitoids along a vertical canopy gradient in a temperate forest. We sampled target insects using an elevated work platform in a 0.2 ha broadleaf deciduous forest plot in the Czech Republic. We analyzed the effect of vertical position among three canopy levels (first [lowest], second [middle], and third [highest]) and tree species on community descriptors (density, diversity, and parasitism rate) and food web structure. We also analyzed vertical patterns in density and parasitism rate between exposed and semiconcealed hosts, and the vertical preference of the most abundant parasitoid taxa in relation to their host specificity. Tree species was an important determinant of all community descriptors and food web structure. Insect density and diversity varied with the vertical gradient, but was only significant for hosts. Both host guilds were most abundant in the second level, but only the density of exposed hosts declined in the third level. Parasitism rate decreased from the first to third level. The overall parasitism rate did not differ between guilds, but semiconcealed hosts suffered lower parasitism in the third level. Less host-specific taxa (Ichneumonidae, Braconidae) operated more frequently lower in the canopy, whereas more host-specific Tachinidae followed their host distribution. The most host-specific Chalcidoidea preferred the third level. Vertical stratification of insect density, diversity, and parasitism rate was most pronounced in the tallest tree species. Therefore, our study contradicts the general paradigm of weak arthropod stratification in temperate forest canopies. However, in the network structure, vertical variation might be superseded by variation among tree species.
尽管森林冠层中的食草动物及其寄生蜂具有多样性和生态重要性,但我们对它们的了解仍然有限。因此,了解塑造食草动物 - 寄生蜂群落结构的因素非常重要,尤其是垂直梯度的影响。我们调查了一个温带森林中沿冠层垂直梯度的暴露和半隐蔽的食叶幼虫及其寄生蜂的定量群落数据集。我们在捷克共和国一个0.2公顷的阔叶落叶林地块中使用高架工作平台对目标昆虫进行采样。我们分析了三个冠层水平(第一[最低]、第二[中间]和第三[最高])的垂直位置和树种对群落描述指标(密度、多样性和寄生率)以及食物网结构的影响。我们还分析了暴露和半隐蔽宿主之间密度和寄生率的垂直模式,以及最丰富的寄生蜂类群相对于其宿主特异性的垂直偏好。树种是所有群落描述指标和食物网结构的重要决定因素。昆虫密度和多样性随垂直梯度变化,但仅对宿主有显著影响。两个宿主类群在第二层最为丰富,但只有暴露宿主的密度在第三层下降。寄生率从第一层到第三层降低。两个类群的总体寄生率没有差异,但半隐蔽宿主在第三层的寄生率较低。宿主特异性较低的类群(姬蜂科、茧蜂科)在冠层较低处活动更频繁,而宿主特异性较高的寄蝇科则跟随其宿主分布。宿主特异性最高的小蜂总科偏好第三层。昆虫密度、多样性和寄生率的垂直分层在最高的树种中最为明显。因此,我们的研究与温带森林冠层中节肢动物分层较弱的一般范式相矛盾。然而,在网络结构中,垂直变化可能会被树种之间的变化所取代。