Abstract

Land‐use and climate change are two of the primary drivers of the current biodiversity crisis. However, we lack understanding of how single‐species and multispecies associations are affected by interactions between multiple environmental stressors.We address this gap by examining how environmental degradation interacts with daily stochastic temperature variation to affect individual life history and population dynamics in a host–parasitoid trophic interaction, using the Indian meal moth, Plodia interpunctella, and its parasitoid wasp Venturia canescens.We carried out a single‐generation individual life‐history experiment and a multigeneration microcosm experiment during which individuals and microcosms were maintained at a mean temperature of 26°C that was either kept constant or varied stochastically, at four levels of host resource degradation, in the presence or absence of parasitoids.At the individual level, resource degradation increased juvenile development time and decreased adult body size in both species. Parasitoids were more sensitive to temperature variation than their hosts, with a shorter juvenile stage duration than in constant temperatures and a longer adult life span in moderately degraded environments. Resource degradation also altered the host's response to temperature variation, leading to a longer juvenile development time at high resource degradation. At the population level, moderate resource degradation amplified the effects of temperature variation on host and parasitoid populations compared with no or high resource degradation and parasitoid overall abundance was lower in fluctuating temperatures. Top‐down regulation by the parasitoid and bottom‐up regulation driven by resource degradation contributed to more than 50% of host and parasitoid population responses to temperature variation.Our results demonstrate that environmental degradation can strongly affect how species in a trophic interaction respond to short‐term temperature fluctuations through direct and indirect trait‐mediated effects. These effects are driven by species differences in sensitivity to environmental conditions and modulate top‐down (parasitism) and bottom‐up (resource) regulation. This study highlights the need to account for differences in the sensitivity of species’ traits to environmental stressors to understand how interacting species will respond to simultaneous anthropogenic changes.

Highlights

  • Anthropogenic environmental modifications through land‐use and climate change are among the primary threats to biodiversity, causing widespread changes in species distribution and species declines and extinctions (Nowakowski, Frishkoff, Agha, Todd, & Scheffers, 2018)

  • We address this gap by examining how environmental degradation interacts with daily stochastic temperature variation to affect individual life history and population dynamics in a host–parasitoid trophic interaction, using the Indian meal moth, Plodia interpunctella, and its parasitoid wasp Venturia canescens

  • Using the Plodia‐Venturia host–parasitoid model system as a proxy for natural populations in degraded environments, we demonstrated that resource degradation can fundamentally alter species’ responses to daily stochastic temperature fluctuations through both bottom‐up and top‐down effects

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Anthropogenic environmental modifications through land‐use and climate change are among the primary threats to biodiversity, causing widespread changes in species distribution and species declines and extinctions (Nowakowski, Frishkoff, Agha, Todd, & Scheffers, 2018). Only one, to our knowledge, investigated the consequences of short‐term temperature fluctuations and their interaction with habitat modification, but only in a single species (Fourcade et al, 2017) These studies show that habitat fragmentation and low patch connectivity limit populations’ capacities to track climatically suitable habitats by reducing dispersal, increasing the extinction risk of populations exposed to climate change Juvenile development of both species has similar thermal optima and ranges of thermal tolerance, but adult longevity is more sensitive to high temperatures in Venturia (Spanoudis & Andreadis, 2012) This model system provides an ideal proxy for trophic interactions in degraded habitats by reproducing dynamics frequently observed in natural populations (e.g. generation cycles, Begon et al, 1995; Bjornstad et al, 2001), which are driven by the same mechanisms involved in species responses to habitat degradation (i.e. variation in food availability, resource quality and intraspecific competition). (e) resource degradation will reduce host and parasitoid abundance and dampen their population cycles through bottom‐up effects and (f) have a stronger impact on host dynamics in “host‐parasitoid” than in “host‐alone” populations through top‐down effects by increasing the host's window of vulnerability to parasitism

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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