Effects of the vertical distribution of a root-feeding insect (Anomala cuprea) on the yield, mortality, and size structure of Lolium perenne populations at different plant densities

Author:

Tsunoda Tomonori11,Kachi Naoki11,Suzuki Jun-Ichirou11

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, Tokyo Metropolitan University, 1-1 Minamiosawa, Hachioji, Tokyo 192-0397, Japan.

Abstract

The vertical distribution of belowground herbivores plays an important role in determining the performance of an individual plant, but we still do not know the effects of this distribution on plant populations. A grass (Lolium perenne L.) was, therefore, grown at two densities with three vertical distributions of the belowground herbivore Anomala cuprea Hope (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae). The population yield decreased significantly in the treatments with a herbivore, and decreased most when the herbivore was in the top feeding zone (i.e., the shallowest soil). Plants only died when the herbivore was in the top zone or was free to move within the pot. At low plant density, the biomass of the three largest shoots decreased significantly in the presence of a herbivore, but that of shoots in the fourth and smaller ranks did not. At high plant density, shoot biomass was not significantly affected by herbivory, irrespective of plant size. The standard deviation of shoot size was larger at low densities than at high densities. At low, but not high plant densities, the standard deviation decreased when herbivory occurred in the shallowest soil layer. To our knowledge, this study is the first to demonstrate that the vertical distribution of a belowground herbivore can markedly affect the size dynamics of a plant population.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference47 articles.

1. Community heterogeneity and the evolution of interactions between plants and insect herbivores

2. Belowground biodiversity and ecosystem functioning

3. Bardgett, R.D., and Wardle, D.A. 2010. Aboveground-belowground linkages: biotic interactions, ecosystem processes, and global change. Oxford Series in Ecology and Evolution, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK.

4. Going underground: root traits as drivers of ecosystem processes

5. Begon, M., Harper, J.H., and Townsend, C.R. (Editors). 2006. Ecology: individuals, populations and communities. 4th ed. Blackwell Scientific, Oxford, UK.

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