Grodsky Steven M, Saul-Gershenz Leslie S, Moore-O'Leary Kara A, Hernandez Rebecca R
Wild Energy Initiative, John Muir Institute of the Environment, University of California, Davis, 1 Shields Ave., Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Department of Entomology and Nematology, University of California, Davis, 1 Shields Ave., Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Insects. 2020 Apr 21;11(4):257. doi: 10.3390/insects11040257.
Butterfly-host plant relationships can inform our understanding of ecological and trophic interactions that contribute to ecosystem function, resiliency, and services. The ecology of danaid-milkweed (Apocynaceae) host plant interactions has been studied in several biomes but is neglected in deserts. Our objective was to determine effects of plant traits, seasonality, and landscape-level host plant availability on selection of Mojave milkweed ( A. Gray) by ovipositing monarch butterflies ( ) and queen butterflies () in the Californian Mojave Desert. We surveyed all known Mojave milkweed locations in the Ivanpah Valley, California ( = 419) during early, mid-, and late spring in 2017. For each survey, we counted monarch and queen butterfly eggs on each Mojave milkweed plant. We also measured canopy cover, height, volume, and reproductive stage of each Mojave milkweed plant. We counted a total of 276 queen butterfly eggs and zero monarch butterfly eggs on Mojave milkweed host plants. We determined that count of queen butterfly eggs significantly increased with increasing Mojave milkweed canopy cover. Additionally, count of queen butterfly eggs was: (1) greater on adult Mojave milkweed plants than on juvenile and seedling plants and greater on juvenile Mojave milkweed plants than on seedling plants; and (2) greater during early spring than mid-spring-we recorded no eggs during late spring. Based on aggregation indices, queen butterfly eggs occurred on Mojave milkweed plants in a nonrandom, clustered pattern throughout the Ivanpah Valley. We provide the first evidence of trophic interactions between queen butterflies and Mojave milkweed at multiple spatial scales in the Mojave Desert, suggesting that conservation and management practices for both species should be implemented concurrently. Given its role as an herbivore, pollinator and prey, the queen butterfly may serve as a model organism for understanding effects of anthropogenic disturbance (e.g., solar energy development) on "bottom-up" and trophic interactions among soils, plants and animals in desert ecosystems.
蝴蝶与寄主植物的关系有助于我们理解那些对生态系统功能、恢复力及服务功能有贡献的生态和营养相互作用。关于斑蝶科蝴蝶与马利筋(夹竹桃科)寄主植物相互作用的生态学研究已在多个生物群落中展开,但在沙漠地区却被忽视。我们的目标是确定植物性状、季节性以及景观尺度上寄主植物的可利用性对在加利福尼亚莫哈韦沙漠产卵的黑脉金斑蝶( )和女王蝴蝶( )选择莫哈韦马利筋(A. Gray)的影响。2017年早春、仲春和晚春期间,我们对加利福尼亚州伊瓦帕山谷所有已知的莫哈韦马利筋分布地点( = 419)进行了调查。每次调查时,我们统计每株莫哈韦马利筋上黑脉金斑蝶和女王蝴蝶的卵数。我们还测量了每株莫哈韦马利筋的树冠覆盖度、高度、体积以及生殖阶段。在莫哈韦马利筋寄主植物上,我们总共统计到276枚女王蝴蝶的卵,而黑脉金斑蝶的卵数为零。我们确定,女王蝴蝶的卵数随着莫哈韦马利筋树冠覆盖度的增加而显著增加。此外,女王蝴蝶的卵数:(1)在成年莫哈韦马利筋植株上比在幼年和幼苗植株上更多,在幼年莫哈韦马利筋植株上比在幼苗植株上更多;(2)在早春比仲春更多——晚春期间我们未记录到卵。基于聚集指数,女王蝴蝶的卵在伊瓦帕山谷的莫哈韦马利筋植株上呈非随机的聚集分布模式。我们首次提供了莫哈韦沙漠中多个空间尺度上女王蝴蝶与莫哈韦马利筋之间营养相互作用的证据,这表明对这两个物种的保护和管理措施应同时实施。鉴于女王蝴蝶作为草食动物、传粉者和猎物的角色,它可能成为理解人为干扰(如太阳能开发)对沙漠生态系统中土壤、植物和动物之间“自下而上”及营养相互作用影响的模式生物。