Abstract

SummaryPredators not only consume prey but exert nonconsumptive effects in form of scaring, consequently disturbing feeding or reproduction. However, how alternative food sources and hunting mode interactively affect consumptive and nonconsumptive effects with implications for prey fitness have not been addressed, impending functional understanding of such tritrophic interactions. With a herbivorous beetle, two omnivorous predatory bugs (plant sap as alternative food, contrasting hunting modes), and four willow genotypes (contrasting suitability for beetle/omnivore), we investigated direct and indirect effects of plant quality on the beetles key reproductive traits (oviposition rate, clutch size). Using combinations of either or both omnivores on different plant genotypes, we calculated the contribution of consumptive (eggs predated) and nonconsumptive (fewer eggs laid) effect on beetle fitness, including a prey density‐independent measure (c:nc ratio). We found that larger clutches increase egg survival in presence of the omnivore not immediately consuming all eggs. However, rather than lowering mean, the beetles generally responded with a frequency shift toward smaller clutches. However, female beetles decreased mean and changed clutch size frequency with decreasing plant quality, therefore reducing intraspecific exploitative competition among larvae. More importantly, variation in host plant quality (to omnivore) led to nonconsumptive effects between one‐third and twice as strong as the consumptive effects. Increased egg consumption on plants less suitable to the omnivore may therefore be accompanied by less searching and disturbing the beetle, representing a “cost” to the indirect plant defense in the form of a lower nonconsumptive effect. Many predators are omnivores and altering c:nc ratios (with egg retention as the most direct link to prey fitness) via plant quality and hunting behavior should be fundamental to advance ecological theory and applications. Furthermore, exploring modulation of fitness traits by bottom‐up and top‐down effects will help to explain how and why species aggregate.

Highlights

  • Top-­down effects of predators on prey consist of two components: a direct consumptive and an indirect nonconsumptive effect associated with changes in prey behavior

  • We investigate key reproductive traits of a herbivorous leaf beetle and examine whether these traits are altered by bottom-­up and top-­down effects

  • Variation in plant quality exists among species, and between plant genotypes (Kaplan & Thaler, 2010; Stenberg, Lehrman, & Björkman, 2011a), and affects herbivore performance (Kaplan & Thaler, 2010), fitness (Lehrman, Torp, Stenberg, Julkunen-­Tiitto, & Björkman, 2012) and community composition (Schmitz et al, 2008; Wimp, Murphy, Finke, Huberty, & Denno, 2010) via differences in, for example, trichomes that hinder foraging/moving (Mulatu, Applebaum, & Coll, 2006) or volatiles functioning as infochemicals (Degen, Dillmann, Marion-­Poll, & Turlings, 2004)

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Summary

Summary

Predators consume prey but exert nonconsumptive effects in form of scaring, disturbing feeding or reproduction. Two omnivorous predatory bugs (plant sap as alternative food, contrasting hunting modes), and four willow genotypes (contrasting suitability for beetle/omnivore), we investigated direct and indirect effects of plant quality on the beetles key reproductive traits (oviposition rate, clutch size). Increased egg consumption on plants less suitable to the omnivore may be accompanied by less searching and disturbing the beetle, representing a “cost” to the indirect plant defense in the form of a lower nonconsumptive effect. Exploring modulation of fitness traits by bottom-up and top-down effects will help to explain how and why species aggregate KEYWORDS antipredator behavior, biological control, clutch size frequency distribution, foraging behavior, host acceptance, indirect plant defense, nonlethal predator effects, plant suitability, predator– prey interactions, trait-mediated effects

| INTRODUCTION
Findings
| MATERIAL AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION

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