Data from: Meta-analysis of the effects of insect pathogens: Implications for plant reproduction
Despite extensive work on both insect disease and plant reproduction, there is little research on the intersection of the two. Insect-infecting pathogens could disrupt the pollination process by affecting pollinator population density or traits. Pathogens may also infect insect herbivores and change...
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Zusammenfassung: | Despite extensive work on both insect disease and plant reproduction,
there is little research on the intersection of the two. Insect-infecting
pathogens could disrupt the pollination process by affecting pollinator
population density or traits. Pathogens may also infect insect herbivores
and change herbivory, potentially altering resource allocation to plant
reproduction. We conducted a meta-analysis to 1) summarize the literature
on the effects of pathogens on insect pollinators and herbivores and 2)
quantify the extent to which pathogens affect insect traits, with
potential repercussions for plant reproduction. We found 39 articles that
fit our criteria for inclusion, extracting 218 measures of insect traits
for 21 different insect species exposed to 25 different pathogens. We
detected a negative effect of pathogen exposure on insect traits, which
varied by host function: pathogens had a significant negative effect on
insects that were herbivores or carried multiple functions but not on
insects that solely functioned as pollinators. Particular pathogen types
were heavily studied in certain insect orders, with 7 of 11 viral
pathogen studies conducted in Lepidoptera and 5 of 9 fungal pathogen
studies conducted in Hymenoptera. Our results suggest that most studies
have focused on a small set of host–pathogen pairs. To understand the
implications for plant reproduction, future work is needed to directly
measure the effects of pathogens on pollinator effectiveness. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.9s4mw6mmw |