Influence of plant genetic diversity on interactions between higher trophic levels
Author(s) -
Xoaquín Moreira,
Kailen A. Mooney
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
biology letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.596
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1744-957X
pISSN - 1744-9561
DOI - 10.1098/rsbl.2013.0133
Subject(s) - biology , polyculture , aphid , intraspecific competition , trophic level , ecology , herbivore , parasitoid , guild , monoculture , abundance (ecology) , genetic diversity , acyrthosiphon pisum , agronomy , biological pest control , aphididae , botany , homoptera , population , pest analysis , demography , fishery , habitat , sociology , fish <actinopterygii> , aquaculture
While the ecological consequences of plant diversity have received much attention, the mechanisms by which intraspecific diversity affects associated communities remains understudied. We report on a field experiment documenting the effects of patch diversity in the plant Baccharis salicifolia (genotypic monocultures versus polycultures of four genotypes), ants (presence versus absence) and their interaction on ant-tended aphids, ants and parasitic wasps, and the mechanistic pathways by which diversity influences their multi-trophic interactions. Five months after planting, polycultures (versus monocultures) had increased abundances of aphids (threefold), ants (3.2-fold) and parasitoids (1.7-fold) owing to non-additive effects of genetic diversity. The effect on aphids was direct, as plant genetic diversity did not mediate ant-aphid, parasitoid-aphid or ant-parasitoid interactions. This increase in aphid abundance occurred even though plant growth (and thus aphid resources) was not higher in polycultures. The increase in ants and parasitoids was an indirect effect, due entirely to higher aphid abundance. Ants reduced parasitoid abundance by 60 per cent, but did not affect aphid abundance or plant growth, and these top-down effects were equivalent between monocultures and polycultures. In summary, intraspecific plant diversity did not increase primary productivity, but nevertheless had strong effects across multiple trophic levels, and effects on both herbivore mutualists and enemies could be predicted entirely as an extension of plant-herbivore interactions.National Science FoundationThis research was funded by National Science Foundation grants DEB-0919178 and DEB-1120794. XM received financial support from Postdoctoral Fulbright/Ministry of Education grant program.Spanish Ministry of EducationPeer Reviewe
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