Abstract

There are very few studies that have investigated host-specificity among tropical herbivorous insects. Indeed, most of the trophic interactions of herbivorous insects in Southeast Asian tropical rainforests remain unknown, and whether polyphagous feeding is common in the herbivores of this ecosystem has not been determined. The present study employed DNA bar coding to reveal the trophic associations of adult leaf-chewing chrysomelid beetles in a Bornean rainforest. Plant material ingested by the adults was retrieved from the bodies of the insects, and a portion of the chloroplast rbcL sequence was then amplified from this material. The plants were identified at the family level using an existing reference database of chloroplast DNA. Our DNA-based diet analysis of eleven chrysomelid species successfully identified their host plant families and indicated that five beetle species fed on more than two families within the angiosperms, and four species fed on several families of gymnosperms and/or ferns together with multiple angiosperm families. These findings suggest that generalist chrysomelid beetles associated with ecologically and taxonomically distant plants constitute a part of the plant-insect network of the Bornean rainforest.

Highlights

  • An understanding of the host-specific interactions of herbivorous insects is critical to explaining the overwhelming diversity of plants and insects observed in tropical forests

  • The concept of high host specificity among insects has contributed to the estimation of total arthropod species richness on the earth since Erwin [3] first estimated the number of tropical arthropod species at 30 million [4,5]

  • This study aimed to identify the plant families that chrysomelid adults (Galerucinae, Chrysomelidae) feed on in a Bornean rainforest and to evaluate the use of DNA bar coding to understand the interactions between herbivorous insects and their unknown host plants in a Bornean tropical forest

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Summary

Introduction

An understanding of the host-specific interactions of herbivorous insects is critical to explaining the overwhelming diversity of plants and insects observed in tropical forests. The finely partitioned niches promoted by the high host specificity of tropical insect herbivores could facilitate the species coexistence of these species (see review [1,2]). Polyphagous feeding on congeneric and confamilial plant species is common among leaf chewers (e.g., [5,6,7,8,9,10,11]) These results come primarily from Neotropical and Papua New Guinean forests, and it remains unclear whether polyphagous feeding is common for herbivorous insects in other tropical regions

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