Abstract

Intraguild predation is an extreme form of competition, that depends on resource availability, niche overlap, behaviour and diversity. However, despite modelling and mesocosm experiments, field studies are scarce, and we know nothing of its temporal dynamics within real-world food webs, particularly in the context of biological control. To address this, we added manure to cereal fields to increase decomposer prey, and analysed the diet of over 6000 predators over the entire cropping season during two consecutive years. Our results show that manure increased available prey temporarily and reduced intraguild predation. With this organic fertilization, a reduction in pest spread between tillers within fields correlated with lower intraguild predation, while pest density remained unchanged across treatments, making the net effect on biological control unclear. We hypothesize that the mechanism responsible for why lowering intraguild predation reduces pest spread are changes in predator behaviour, that allow predators to exert more pressure on pests. Conversely, the absence of an effect on pest density may be linked to other effects of fertilization, such as increased pest and plant growth counteracting any increase in predation pressure. The high temporal resolution of our data showed how dynamic IGP is throughout the season, which stresses the importance of studying food webs over time, to generate a mechanistic understanding of biological control.

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