Determinants of parasitoid communities of willow-galling sawflies: habitat overrides physiology, host plant and space

Studies on the determinants of plant–herbivore and herbivore–parasitoid associations provide important insights into the origin and maintenance of global and local species richness. If parasitoids are specialists on herbivore niches rather than on herbivore taxa, then alternating escape of herbivore...

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Published in:Molecular Ecology
Main Authors: Barstad, Trond Elling, Várkonyi, Gergely, Nyman, Tommi, Koivisto, Reijo, Shaw, Mark R, Roininen, Heikki, Leppänen, Sanna, Vikberg, Veli
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: John Wiley & Sons Ltd 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.13369
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spelling ftnmscotlanddc:oai:hyku:5540d758-8566-42e0-baa5-10eea172f8cd 2023-05-15T14:59:59+02:00 Determinants of parasitoid communities of willow-galling sawflies: habitat overrides physiology, host plant and space Barstad, Trond Elling Várkonyi, Gergely Nyman, Tommi Koivisto, Reijo Shaw, Mark R Roininen, Heikki Leppänen, Sanna Vikberg, Veli 2015-10-10 https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.13369 unknown John Wiley & Sons Ltd Molecular Ecology http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.13369 enemy-free space tritrophic food webs vertical diversification effects speciation community barcoding Article 2015 ftnmscotlanddc https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.13369 2022-07-28T20:37:27Z Studies on the determinants of plant–herbivore and herbivore–parasitoid associations provide important insights into the origin and maintenance of global and local species richness. If parasitoids are specialists on herbivore niches rather than on herbivore taxa, then alternating escape of herbivores into novel niches and delayed resource tracking by parasitoids could fuel diversification at both trophic levels. We used DNA barcoding to identify parasitoids that attack larvae of seven Pontania sawfly species that induce leaf galls on eight willow species growing in subarctic and arctic–alpine habitats in three geographic locations in northern Fennoscandia, and then applied distance- and model-based multivariate analyses and phylogenetic regression methods to evaluate the hierarchical importance of location, phylogeny and different galler niche dimensions on parasitoid host use. We found statistically significant variation in parasitoid communities across geographic locations and willow host species, but the differences were mainly quantitative due to extensive sharing of enemies among gallers within habitat types. By contrast, the divide between habitats defined two qualitatively different network compartments, because many common parasitoids exhibited strong habitat preference. Galler and parasitoid phylogenies did not explain associations, because distantly related arctic–alpine gallers were attacked by a species-poor enemy community dominated by two parasitoid species that most likely have independently tracked the gallers’ evolutionary shifts into the novel habitat. Our results indicate that barcode- and phylogeny-based analyses of food webs that span forested vs. tundra or grassland environments could improve our understanding of vertical diversification effects in complex plant–herbivore–parasitoid networks. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Fennoscandia Subarctic Tundra National Museums Scotland (NMS) Research Repository Arctic Molecular Ecology 24 19 5059 5074
institution Open Polar
collection National Museums Scotland (NMS) Research Repository
op_collection_id ftnmscotlanddc
language unknown
topic enemy-free space
tritrophic food webs
vertical diversification effects
speciation
community barcoding
spellingShingle enemy-free space
tritrophic food webs
vertical diversification effects
speciation
community barcoding
Barstad, Trond Elling
Várkonyi, Gergely
Nyman, Tommi
Koivisto, Reijo
Shaw, Mark R
Roininen, Heikki
Leppänen, Sanna
Vikberg, Veli
Determinants of parasitoid communities of willow-galling sawflies: habitat overrides physiology, host plant and space
topic_facet enemy-free space
tritrophic food webs
vertical diversification effects
speciation
community barcoding
description Studies on the determinants of plant–herbivore and herbivore–parasitoid associations provide important insights into the origin and maintenance of global and local species richness. If parasitoids are specialists on herbivore niches rather than on herbivore taxa, then alternating escape of herbivores into novel niches and delayed resource tracking by parasitoids could fuel diversification at both trophic levels. We used DNA barcoding to identify parasitoids that attack larvae of seven Pontania sawfly species that induce leaf galls on eight willow species growing in subarctic and arctic–alpine habitats in three geographic locations in northern Fennoscandia, and then applied distance- and model-based multivariate analyses and phylogenetic regression methods to evaluate the hierarchical importance of location, phylogeny and different galler niche dimensions on parasitoid host use. We found statistically significant variation in parasitoid communities across geographic locations and willow host species, but the differences were mainly quantitative due to extensive sharing of enemies among gallers within habitat types. By contrast, the divide between habitats defined two qualitatively different network compartments, because many common parasitoids exhibited strong habitat preference. Galler and parasitoid phylogenies did not explain associations, because distantly related arctic–alpine gallers were attacked by a species-poor enemy community dominated by two parasitoid species that most likely have independently tracked the gallers’ evolutionary shifts into the novel habitat. Our results indicate that barcode- and phylogeny-based analyses of food webs that span forested vs. tundra or grassland environments could improve our understanding of vertical diversification effects in complex plant–herbivore–parasitoid networks.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Barstad, Trond Elling
Várkonyi, Gergely
Nyman, Tommi
Koivisto, Reijo
Shaw, Mark R
Roininen, Heikki
Leppänen, Sanna
Vikberg, Veli
author_facet Barstad, Trond Elling
Várkonyi, Gergely
Nyman, Tommi
Koivisto, Reijo
Shaw, Mark R
Roininen, Heikki
Leppänen, Sanna
Vikberg, Veli
author_sort Barstad, Trond Elling
title Determinants of parasitoid communities of willow-galling sawflies: habitat overrides physiology, host plant and space
title_short Determinants of parasitoid communities of willow-galling sawflies: habitat overrides physiology, host plant and space
title_full Determinants of parasitoid communities of willow-galling sawflies: habitat overrides physiology, host plant and space
title_fullStr Determinants of parasitoid communities of willow-galling sawflies: habitat overrides physiology, host plant and space
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of parasitoid communities of willow-galling sawflies: habitat overrides physiology, host plant and space
title_sort determinants of parasitoid communities of willow-galling sawflies: habitat overrides physiology, host plant and space
publisher John Wiley & Sons Ltd
publishDate 2015
url https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.13369
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Fennoscandia
Subarctic
Tundra
genre_facet Arctic
Fennoscandia
Subarctic
Tundra
op_relation Molecular Ecology
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.13369
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.13369
container_title Molecular Ecology
container_volume 24
container_issue 19
container_start_page 5059
op_container_end_page 5074
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