Abstract

Insects are important but overlooked components of forest ecosystems in New Zealand. For many insect species, information on foraging patterns and trophic relationships is lacking. We examined diet composition and selectivity in a large‐bodied insect, the Auckland tree wētā Hemideina thoracica, in three habitat zones in a lowland New Zealand forest. We asked whether H. thoracica selectively forage from available plant food sources, and whether these choices were lipid‐rich compared to nonpreferred available plants. We also identified the proportion of invertebrates in their frass as a proxy for omnivory. From reconnaissance plot sampling, together with fecal fragment analysis, we report that more than 93% of individual tree wētā had eaten invertebrates before capture. Additionally, wētā in the highest elevation hillslope habitat zone consumed significantly fewer species of plants on average than wētā on the low‐elevation terrace habitat. Upper hillslope wētā also had the highest average number of invertebrate fragments in their frass, significantly more than wētā in the low‐elevation terrace habitat zone. Wētā showed high variability in the consumption of fruit and seeds across all habitat zones. Generally, we did not observe diet differences between the sexes (although it appears that male wētā in the mid‐hillslope habitat ate fruits and seeds more voraciously than females), suggesting that the sexes have similar niche breadths and display similar degrees of omnivorous behavior. Extraction of leaf lipids demonstrated a range of lipid content values in available plants, and Ivlev's Electivity Index indicated that plant species which demonstrated high electivity tended to have higher concentrations of lipids in their leaves. Our findings indicate that H. thoracica forage omnivorously and selectively, and hence play multiple roles in native ecosystems and food webs.

Highlights

  • Feeding is about securing nutrients for growth and reproduction (Lee, Cory, Wilson, Raubenheimer, & Simpson, 2006; Simpson, Sibly, Lee, Behmer, & Raubenheimer, 2004; Slansky& Wheeler, 1991)

  • When modeling the probability that a wētā eats a particular species, and after accounting for overdispersion, we found no significant difference between a model that allowed for interactions between the habitat zones and each of the mean lipid concentration of a plant species and the percentage ground cover of the plant species in each zone and a reduced model that included an effect for mean lipid concentration alone (n = 33, χ2 = 37.73, df = 7, p = .607, corrected for overdispersion)

  • The mean number of plant species present in the frass of upper hillslope H. thoracica was significantly less than terrace H. thoracica, indicating that diet breadth can vary with habitat, but further data are required to explore both prey invertebrate and habitat patterns

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Feeding is about securing nutrients for growth and reproduction Tree wētā are important forest consumers, feeding on the leaves of a variety of native and non-­native plant species (Dewhurst, 2012; Griffin, Morgan-­Richards, & Trewick, 2011), but many aspects of their diet and foraging are not yet quantified, including the importance of omnivorous feeding to gain N-­rich foods (Wehi, Raubenheimer, & Morgan-­Richards, 2013). Dewhurst (2012) hypothesized that nitrogen might be a limited nutrient, as with many insects, and performed captive feeding trials to determine whether tree wētā preferentially selected leaves of plant species with high concentrations of nitrogen. Our findings provide new insights on the foraging ecology of H. thoracica in lowland forests

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
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