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Bull Entomol Res


Title:Disturbance induced dynamics of a tritrophic novel ecosystem
Author(s):Lakatos KT; Laszlo Z; Tothmeresz B;
Address:"Department of Ecology,University of Debrecen,Debrecen, Egyetem square 1, H-4032,Hungary. Hungarian Department of Biology and Ecology,Babes-Bolyai University,Str. Clinicilor nr. 5-7, 400006 Cluj-Napoca,Romania. MTA-DE Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services Research Group,Debrecen, Egyetem square 1, H-4032,Hungary"
Journal Title:Bull Entomol Res
Year:2018
Volume:20170726
Issue:2
Page Number:158 - 165
DOI: 10.1017/S0007485317000621
ISSN/ISBN:1475-2670 (Electronic) 0007-4853 (Linking)
Abstract:"Novel ecosystems formed by invasive plants provide a good opportunity to get insight into early dynamics and pattern formation of these ecosystems. The invasive black locust as host plant, Bruchophagus robiniae as host-specific seed predator and its parasitoids were the components of the studied tritrophic system. To investigate disturbance-driven dynamics of this system we created seed-vacated host plant patches in a field experiment. We removed all pods from selected patches of black locust resulting in an induced local extinction of seed predators and their parasitoids. We hypothesized that disturbance enhances top-down control by parasitoids; this enhanced top-down control decreases seed predation, facilitating the host plant's spread. We found that disturbance modified only parasitism after controlling with year effect: in vacated patches median parasitism was higher than in control patches. Seed predation exceeded its initial level in vacated patches in the third year after the disturbance, but in the fourth year it dropped again presumably due to the strong top-down control. Our findings also suggested that the seed predator was also affected by the bottom-up control of its host plant's density. We found that in the studied new ecosystem the top-down control was strengthened by the disturbance. Since the host plant of the tritrophic system is an invasive species, partial habitat disturbance of such species may increase the severity of parasitoid top-down control, which may reduce seed predation by the herbivores"
Keywords:Animals *Food Chain *Insecta *Introduced Species *Robinia black locust field experiment host-parasitoid dynamics invasive species seed predators vacated host plant patches;
Notes:"MedlineLakatos, K T Laszlo, Z Tothmeresz, B eng England 2017/07/27 Bull Entomol Res. 2018 Apr; 108(2):158-165. doi: 10.1017/S0007485317000621. Epub 2017 Jul 26"

 
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