Abstract

Most studies investigating the importance of non-consumptive interactions for herbivore suppression focus on pairwise interactions between one predator and one prey, ignoring any community context. Further, the potential for non-consumptive interactions to arise between herbivores and non-enemy organisms is commonly overlooked. We investigated the relative contributions of consumptive and non-consumptive effects to aphid suppression by a wasp assemblage containing both enemies and non-enemies. We examined the suppression of two aphid species with different defensive strategies, pea aphids (Acyrthosiphon pisum), which drop from their host plant to the ground, and green peach aphids (Myzus persicae), which remain on the plant and merely walk away. The expectation was that riskier defensive behaviors, like abandoning the plant, would result in larger non-consumptive effects. We found that the outcome of multi-species interactions differed depending on the mechanism of suppression, with interference among wasps in their consumptive effects and additivity in their non-consumptive effects. We also found that, despite differences in defensive strategies, the non-consumptive effects of wasps on aphid abundance were significant for both aphid species. Furthermore, when part of a multi-species assemblage, non-enemies enhanced aphid suppression via complementary non-consumptive effects with lethal enemies, but this increase in suppression was offset by disruption in the consumptive suppression of aphids by lethal enemies. We conclude that non-consumptive effects arise from interactions with both enemy and non-enemy species and that both can contribute to herbivore suppression when part of a broader community. We predict that encouraging the presence of non-enemy organisms may provide insurance against fluctuations in the size of consumptive enemy populations and buffer against herbivore outbreaks.

Highlights

  • Natural enemies suppress herbivore populations through a combination of consumptive and non-consumptive effects [1]

  • Pea aphids, which respond to the risk of predation by dropping from their host plant, experienced significant non-consumptive suppression by the lethal enemy A. ervi (F1,21 = 35.53, P < 0.0001, Fig 2A) and moderately significant non-consumptive suppression by the non-enemy A. colemani (F1,21 = 3.06, P = 0.09, Fig 2A)

  • The presence of A. colemani caused a >75% decline in parasitism of pea aphids by A. ervi. This was due to an overall decline in parasitism by A. ervi in the presence of A. colemani, and not due to a shift in the allocation of A. ervi reproductive effort between pea aphids and green peach aphids

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Natural enemies suppress herbivore populations through a combination of consumptive and non-consumptive effects [1]. Consumptive effects occur when enemies kill and consume prey; non-consumptive effects arise when herbivores invest in defensive traits (e.g., behavior, morphology or physiology) in response to a perceived risk of attack [2, 3]. University of Missouri Research Board (research. missouri.edu/internal/board, DLF)

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call