Abstract

Several plant-related factors can influence the diversity of gall-inducing species communities. In the present study we performed an inventory of gall-inducing arthropods and we tested if the plant species richness and the abundance of super-host plants (Copaifera oblongifolia) influenced positively in the diversity of gall-inducing arthropod species. The study was realized in an area of Neotropical savanna (cerrado sensu stricto) in the Environmental Protection Area (EPA) of Rio Pandeiros, Minas Gerais, Brazil. Host-plant species and gall-inducing arthropods were sampled in 18 10 × 10 m plots distributed in the vegetation. In total we found 40 arthropod gall morphotypes, distributed on 17 botanical families and 29 plant species. Cecidomyiidae (Diptera) induced the most arthropod galls (85%), and the plant family Fabaceae had the greatest richness of gall morphotypes (16). The plant species Copaifera oblongifolia and Andira humilis (Fabaceae) were the most important host species with five and three morphotypes, respectively. Galling species richness was not affected by none of explanatory variables (plant species richness and abundance of super-host plants). On the other hand, galling species per plant species was negatively affected by plant species richness and positively affected by abundance of super-host plants. This is the first study of arthropod-induced galls conducted in EPA of Rio Pandeiros, Brazil. Our results corroborate previous studies that highlight the importance of super-host plants for galling arthropod diversity on a local scale.

Highlights

  • Plant-animal interactions between herbivorous arthropods and their host plants encompass the greatest diversity of terrestrial species (Price, 2002)

  • In the present study we performed an inventory of gall-inducing arthropods and we tested if the plant species richness and the abundance of superhost plants (Copaifera oblongifolia) influenced positively in the diversity of gall-inducing arthropod species

  • The study was realized in an area of Neotropical savanna in the Environmental Protection Area (EPA) of Rio Pandeiros, Minas Gerais, Brazil

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Summary

Introduction

Plant-animal interactions between herbivorous arthropods and their host plants encompass the greatest diversity of terrestrial species (Price, 2002). Gall-inducing species represent the most specialized guild (Araújo et al, 2019a), because they are the only arthropods capable of manipulating physiological and anatomical plant structures inducing the formation of galls (review in Miller III & Raman, 2019). Galls can provide shelter for galling arthropods against attack by natural enemies and environmental weathering (Miller III & Raman, 2019). Due to the intimate association between gall-inductors and their host plants, galling arthropod communities tend to be strongly influenced by host plant assemblages (Araújo et al, 2013; Altamirano et al, 2016; Costa & Araújo, 2019)

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