Ünlü Ayse Gül, Obrycki John J, Bucher Roman
Conservation Ecology Philipps-Universität Marburg Marburg Germany.
Department of Entomology College of Agriculture, Food and Environment University of Kentucky Lexington Kentucky USA.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Oct 27;10(23):13334-13344. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6932. eCollection 2020 Dec.
Novel predator-prey interactions can contribute to the invasion success of non-native predators. For example, native prey can fail to recognize and avoid non-native predators due to a lack of co-evolutionary history and cue dissimilarity with native predators. This might result in a competitive advantage for non-native predators. Numerous lady beetle species were globally redistributed as biological control agents against aphids, resulting in novel predator-prey interactions. Here, we investigated the strength of avoidance behavior of the pea aphid () toward chemical cues of native lady beetles and non-native Asian and European and in North America, hypothesizing that cues of non-native lady beetles induce weaker avoidance behavior than cues of co-evolved native lady beetles. Additionally, we compared aphid consumption of lady beetles, examining potential predation advantages of non-native lady beetles. Finally, we compared cue avoidance behavior between North American and European pea aphid populations and aphid consumption of native and non-native lady beetles in North America and Europe. In North America, pea aphids avoided chemical cues of all ladybeetle species tested, regardless of their origin. In contrast to pea aphids in North America, European pea aphids did not avoid cues of the non-native . The non-native and were among the largest and most voracious lady beetle species tested, on both continents. Consequently, in North America non-native lady beetle species might have a competitive advantage on shared food resources due to their relatively large body size, compared to several native American lady beetle species. In Europe, however, non-native might benefit from missing aphid cue avoidance as well as a large body size. The co-evolutionary time gap between the European and North American invasion of likely explains the intercontinental differences in cue avoidance behavior and might indicate evolution in aphids toward non-native predators.
新型捕食者 - 猎物相互作用可能有助于非本地捕食者的入侵成功。例如,本地猎物可能由于缺乏共同进化历史以及与本地捕食者的线索差异而无法识别和躲避非本地捕食者。这可能会导致非本地捕食者具有竞争优势。许多瓢虫物种作为防治蚜虫的生物防治剂在全球范围内重新分布,从而产生了新型捕食者 - 猎物相互作用。在此,我们研究了豌豆蚜对北美本地瓢虫以及非本地亚洲和欧洲瓢虫化学线索的回避行为强度,假设非本地瓢虫的线索比共同进化的本地瓢虫线索引发的回避行为更弱。此外,我们比较了瓢虫对蚜虫的捕食量,研究非本地瓢虫潜在的捕食优势。最后,我们比较了北美和欧洲豌豆蚜种群之间的线索回避行为以及北美和欧洲本地及非本地瓢虫对蚜虫的捕食量。在北美,豌豆蚜回避了所有测试瓢虫物种的化学线索,无论其来源如何。与北美豌豆蚜不同,欧洲豌豆蚜不回避非本地[瓢虫物种名称未给出]的线索。在两大洲,非本地[瓢虫物种名称未给出]和[瓢虫物种名称未给出]都是测试的体型最大且食量最大的瓢虫物种。因此,在北美,与几种北美本地瓢虫物种相比,非本地瓢虫物种可能因其相对较大的体型而在共享食物资源方面具有竞争优势。然而,在欧洲,非本地[瓢虫物种名称未给出]可能既受益于蚜虫不回避其线索,又受益于其较大的体型。欧洲和北美[瓢虫物种名称未给出]入侵之间的共同进化时间差距可能解释了线索回避行为的洲际差异,并可能表明蚜虫对非本地捕食者的进化。