Data from: Pest suppression in cultivar mixtures is influenced by neighbor-specific plant-plant communication
Increased plant genotypic diversity in crop fields can promote ecosystem services including pest control, but understanding of mechanisms behind herbivore population responses to cultivar mixtures is limited. We studied aphid settling on barley plants exposed to volatiles from different cultivars, a...
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Zusammenfassung: | Increased plant genotypic diversity in crop fields can promote ecosystem
services including pest control, but understanding of mechanisms behind
herbivore population responses to cultivar mixtures is limited. We studied
aphid settling on barley plants exposed to volatiles from different
cultivars, aphid population development in monocultures and two-cultivar
mixtures, and differences in volatile composition between studied
cultivars. Aphid responses to one cultivar in a mixture were
neighbor-specific and this was more important for pest suppression than
the overall mixture effect, aphid colonization patterns or natural enemy
abundance. Aphid populations decreased most in a mixture where both
cultivars showed a reduced aphid plant acceptance after reciprocal
volatile exposure in the laboratory, and reduced population growth
compared to monocultures in the field. Our findings suggest that herbivore
population responses to crop genotypic diversity can depend on plant-plant
volatile interactions, which can lead to changes in herbivore response to
individual cultivars in a mixture, resulting in slower population growth.
The impact of plant-plant interaction through volatiles on associated
herbivore species is rarely considered, but improved understanding of
these mechanisms would advance our understanding of the ecological
consequences of biodiversity and guide development of sustainable
agricultural practices. Combining cultivars in mixtures based on how they
interact with each other is a promising strategy for sustainable pest
management. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.224h5kr |