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Host‐plant species modifies the diet of an omnivore feeding on three trophic levels
Author(s) -
Magalhães Sara,
Janssen Arne,
Montserrat Marta,
Sabelis Maurice W.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
oikos
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.672
H-Index - 179
eISSN - 1600-0706
pISSN - 0030-1299
DOI - 10.1111/j.0030-1299.2005.13897.x
Subject(s) - biology , spider mite , thrips , western flower thrips , predation , trophic level , mite , omnivore , spider , host (biology) , predator , botany , population , ecology , thripidae , demography , sociology
The diet choice of omnivores feeding on two adjacent trophic levels (either plants and herbivores or herbivores and predators) has been studied extensively. However, omnivores usually feed on more than two trophic levels, and this diet choice and its consequences for population dynamics have hardly been studied. We report how host‐plant quality affects the diet choice of western flower thrips feeding on three trophic levels: plants (cucumber or sweet pepper), eggs of spider mites and eggs of a predatory mite that attacks spider mites. Spider mites feed on the same host plants as thrips and produce a web that hampers predator mobility. To assess the indirect effects of spider mites on predation by thrips, the thrips were offered spider‐mite eggs and predatory‐mite eggs on cucumber or sweet pepper leaf discs that were either clean, damaged by spider mites but without spider‐mite web, or damaged and webbed. We show that, overall, thrips consumed more eggs on sweet pepper, a plant of low quality, than on cucumber, a high quality host plant. On damaged and webbed leaf discs (mimicking the natural situation), thrips killed more predator eggs than spider‐mite eggs on sweet pepper, but they killed equal numbers of eggs of each species on cucumber. This is because web hampered predation on spider‐mite eggs by thrips on sweet pepper, but not on cucumber, whereas it did not affect predation on predatory‐mite eggs. We used the data obtained to parameterize a model of the local dynamics of this system. The model predicts that total predation by the omnivore has little effects on population dynamics, whereas differential attack of predator eggs and spider‐mite eggs by the omnivore has large effects on the dynamics of both mite species on the two host plants.

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