Abstract

Insect herbivore performance and arthropod communities can be affected by mammalian grazing and browsing via altered plant communities and vegetation structure. Far less is known about whether changes to plant architecture can cause similar effects. Browsing generated changes to within plant architecture could potentially have large consequences for arthropod communities, herbivore survival and eventually damage to plants. This study investigates plant-mediated effects of ungulate browsing on arthropod predator communities and on the survival of herbivorous insects. More specifically we studied how different levels of ungulate browsing (1) influenced the arthropod predator community on Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) and (2) affected the survival of the European pine sawfly (Neodiprion sertifer). We related these response variables to browsing-inflicted changes in pine architecture. An observational study of generalist arthropod predators on pine trees revealed a trend toward a quadratic response of ants to browsing intensity—i.e., a higher abundance of ants on moderately browsed trees and lower abundance on intensively browsed trees. A field survey of sawfly larvae revealed a 19% lower larval survival on browsed compared to un-browsed pines, but no difference in survival comparing pines with moderate and high intensity of browsing. A structural equation model revealed that moose generated changes to pine architecture had only a small effect on sawfly larval survival, suggesting additional mediating pine traits affected by browsing. We conclude that insect survival can be altered by ungulate browsing, which could affect damage levels.

Highlights

  • Ungulates can have a strong effect on forest composition and structure (McInnes et al, 1992; Martin et al, 2010)

  • Browsing induced changes in top-down pressure could subsequently lead to altered survival of herbivorous insects

  • Browsing has previously been demonstrated to increase damage levels of insects on birch (Muiruri et al, 2015), but the indirect effect of browsing on herbivore survival mediated through architecture is largely unexplored

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ungulates can have a strong effect on forest composition and structure (McInnes et al, 1992; Martin et al, 2010). Other studies investigating the subsequent effects of browsing on arthropod communities observed a change in both diversity and composition (Suominen et al, 1999; Landsman and Bowman, 2017; Lilleeng et al, 2018). One consequence of an altered predator community is subsequent effects on predation rates of insect herbivores, and plant damage levels. The effect of grazing on understory vegetation and arthropod communities is rather well studied (Suominen et al, 2008; Landsman and Bowman, 2017; Lilleeng et al, 2018). Browsing has previously been demonstrated to increase damage levels of insects on birch (Muiruri et al, 2015), but the indirect effect of browsing on herbivore survival mediated through architecture is largely unexplored

Methods
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