Disentangling herbivore impacts in primary succession by refocusing the plant stress and vigor hypotheses on phenology

The plant stress and plant vigor hypotheses are widely used to explain the distribution and abundance of insect herbivores across their host plants. These hypotheses are the subject of contentious debate within the plant herbivore research community, with several studies finding simultaneous support...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecological monographs 2019-11, Vol.89 (4), p.1-26
Hauptverfasser: Che-Castaldo, Christian, Crisafulli, Charlie M., Bishop, John G., Zipkin, Elise F., Fagan, William F.
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container_end_page 26
container_issue 4
container_start_page 1
container_title Ecological monographs
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creator Che-Castaldo, Christian
Crisafulli, Charlie M.
Bishop, John G.
Zipkin, Elise F.
Fagan, William F.
description The plant stress and plant vigor hypotheses are widely used to explain the distribution and abundance of insect herbivores across their host plants. These hypotheses are the subject of contentious debate within the plant herbivore research community, with several studies finding simultaneous support for both hypotheses for the same plant–herbivore interaction. We address the question of how such support is possible using dynamic site-occupancy models to quantify the attack dynamics of Cryptorhynchus lapathi (poplar-willow weevil) on Salix sitchensis (Sitka willow), a dioecious shrub colonizing Mount St. Helens, Washington, USA after the 1980 eruption, in relation to host plant stress, vigor, and sex. We also introduce several scaling criteria as a rigorous test of the plant vigor hypothesis and demonstrate why modeling insect detection is important in plant–insect studies. Weevils responded positively to water stress associated with seasonal dry-downs, and this response was phenologically compartmentalized by larval feeding mode. Weevils preferentially attacked large and/or flowering stems, imposing an ecological cost on willow reproduction via increased stem mortality and susceptibility to future attack. We propose that the dual response to host plant stress and vigor is due to the synchronization between young weevil larval feeding and willow nutrient pulses that are mediated by environmental stress. In turn, this process drives successional dynamics, causing the juvenilization of upland willow plants and possibly delaying establishment of a willow-dominated upland sere. These results highlight the common, but often overlooked, phenological basis of the plant stress and plant vigor hypotheses, which both focus on how stress changes the quality of plant resources available to immature insects.
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Weevils preferentially attacked large and/or flowering stems, imposing an ecological cost on willow reproduction via increased stem mortality and susceptibility to future attack. We propose that the dual response to host plant stress and vigor is due to the synchronization between young weevil larval feeding and willow nutrient pulses that are mediated by environmental stress. In turn, this process drives successional dynamics, causing the juvenilization of upland willow plants and possibly delaying establishment of a willow-dominated upland sere. 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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects allometric scaling
Cryptorhynchus lapathi
detection
Ecological succession
Environmental stress
Feeding
Feeding behavior
Flowering
herbivore phenology
Herbivores
Host plants
Hypotheses
Insects
Mount St. Helens
Occupancy
occupancy modeling
phenological compartmentalization
Plant communities
Plant resources
Plant stress
plant stress hypothesis
plant vigor hypothesis
Poplar
primary succession
Salix sitchensis
Synchronism
Synchronization
Vigor
Water stress
Willow
title Disentangling herbivore impacts in primary succession by refocusing the plant stress and vigor hypotheses on phenology
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