Dataset: Floral presence and flower identity alter cereal aphid endosymbiont communities on adjacent crops
Floral plantings adjacent to crop fields can recruit populations of natural enemies by providing flower nectar and non-crop prey to increase natural pest regulation. Observed variation in success rates might be due to changes in the unseen community of endosymbionts hosted by many herbivorous insect...
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Zusammenfassung: | Floral plantings adjacent to crop fields can recruit populations of
natural enemies by providing flower nectar and non-crop prey to increase
natural pest regulation. Observed variation in success rates might be due
to changes in the unseen community of endosymbionts hosted by many
herbivorous insects, of which some can confer resistance to natural
enemies, e.g. parasitoid wasps. Reduced insect control may occur if highly
protective symbiont combinations increase in frequency via selection
effects, and this is expected to be stronger in lower diversity systems.
We used a large-scale field trial to analyse the bacterial endosymbiont
communities hosted by cereal aphids (Sitobion avenae) collected along
transects into strip plots of barley plants managed by either conventional
or integrated (including floral field margins and reduced inputs) methods.
In addition, we conducted an outdoor pot experiment to analyse
endosymbionts in S. avenae aphids collected on barley plants that were
either grown alone or alongside one of three flowering plants, across
three time points. In the field, aphids hosted up to four symbionts. The
abundance of aphids and parasitoid wasps was reduced towards the middle of
all fields while aphid symbiont species richness and diversity decreased
into the field in conventional, but not integrated, field-strips. The
proportion of aphids hosting different symbiont combinations varied across
cropping systems, with distances into the fields, and was correlated with
parasitoid wasp abundances. In the pot experiment, aphids hosted up to six
symbionts. Flower presence increased natural enemy abundance and
diversity, and decreased aphid abundance. The proportion of aphids hosting
different symbiont combinations varied across the flower treatment and
time and were correlated with varying abundances of the different
specialist parasitoid wasp species recruited by different flowers.
Synthesis and applications. Floral plantings and flower identity had
community-wide impacts on the combinations of bacterial endosymbionts
hosted by herbivorous insects, which correlated with natural enemy
diversity and abundance. We recommend that integrated management practices
incorporate floral resources within field areas to support a more
functionally diverse and resilient natural enemy community to mitigate
selection for symbiont-mediated pest resistance throughout the cropping
area. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.h44j0zpqs |