Separate and interacting effects of deer florivory and salinity stress on iris herbivores

Most herbivore studies focus on foliage feeders, despite the potentially strong impact of florivores on plant fitness and ecological communities. Vertebrate florivory is particularly noteworthy because it destroys the inflorescence, and may affect the community of floral arthropods. Strong biotic fo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oikos 2008-04, Vol.117 (4), p.564-570
Hauptverfasser: George Wang, H., Mopper, Susan
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Most herbivore studies focus on foliage feeders, despite the potentially strong impact of florivores on plant fitness and ecological communities. Vertebrate florivory is particularly noteworthy because it destroys the inflorescence, and may affect the community of floral arthropods. Strong biotic forces such as florivory can be influenced by abiotic forces. For example, field studies indicate that white-tailed deer Odocoileus virginianus consume up to 90% of all flowers produced in Iris hexagona populations that inhabit high salinity wetlands, whereas freshwater iris populations suffer relatively little damage. We conducted a common garden experiment to investigate the potential effects of vertebrate florivory and salinity on two iris herbivores, the leafminer Cerodontha iridiphora, and the verbena bud moth, Endothenia hebesana. We administered four levels of florivory: zero (control), one, two, and three flowers removed per stalk, and applied three levels of salinity (0, 4 and 8 parts per thousand NaCl) in a full-factorial design. Florivory and salinity had separate and interacting effects on herbivore performance. Salinity was more detrimental to herbivores than florivory, which was beneficial at low levels. A positive effect of moderate salinity on sexual reproduction was reversed by florivory. Our research reveals complex interactions between environmental stress and florivory, an understudied form of herbivory. These interactions have implications for wetland ecological communities that are increasingly exposed to biotic and abiotic stress.
ISSN:0030-1299
1600-0706
DOI:10.1111/j.0030-1299.2008.16335.x