Network structure and taxonomic composition of tritrophic communities of Fagaceae, cynipid gallwasps and parasitoids in Sichuan, China

Author:

Fang Zhiqiang1ORCID,Tang Chang‐Ti2ORCID,Sinclair Frazer2ORCID,Csóka György3ORCID,Hearn Jack24ORCID,McCormack Koorosh2ORCID,Melika George5ORCID,Mikolajczak Katarzyna M.26ORCID,Nicholls James A.7ORCID,Nieves‐Aldrey José‐Luis8ORCID,Notton David G.9ORCID,Radosevic Sara2ORCID,Bailey Richard I.10ORCID,Reiss Alexander2ORCID,Zhang Yuanmeng M.2ORCID,Zhu Ying11ORCID,Fang Shengguo12ORCID,Schönrogge Karsten13ORCID,Stone Graham N.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Emeishan Biodiversity Observation and Research Station of Sichuan Province, Sichuan Provincial Academy of Natural Resources Sciences Emeishan Wannian Parking Lot Leishan China

2. Institute of Ecology and Evolution University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

3. University of Sopron, Forest Research Institute Mátrafüred Hungary

4. Scotland's Rural College (SRUC) Centre for Epidemiology and Planetary Health Inverness UK

5. Plant Health Diagnostic National Reference Laboratory National Food Chain Safety Office Budapest Hungary

6. Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment London School of Economics London UK

7. CSIRO, Australian National Insect Collection Acton Australian Capital Territory Australia

8. Departamento de Biodiversidad y Biología Evolutiva Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (CSIC) Madrid Spain

9. National Museums Scotland National Museums Collection Centre Edinburgh UK

10. Department of Ecology and Vertebrate Zoology, Faculty of Biology and Environmental Protection University of Lodz Łódź Poland

11. Institute of Qinghai‐Tibetan Plateau Southwest Minzu University Chengdu China

12. MOE Key Laboratory of Biosystems Homeostasis & Protection, State Conservation Centre for Gene Resources of Endangered Wildlife, College of Life Sciences Zhejiang University Hangzhou China

13. UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology Wallingford UK

Abstract

Abstract A key question in insect community ecology is whether parasitoid assemblages are structured by the food plants of their herbivore hosts. Tritrophic communities centred on oak‐feeding cynipid gallwasps are one of the best‐studied tritrophic insect communities. Previous work suggests that host plant identity is a much stronger predictor of oak–cynipid interactions than of cynipid–parasitoid interactions. However, these relationships have not been formally quantified. We reason that the potential for ‘bottom‐up’ effects should increase with host plant phylogenetic diversity. We, therefore, generated quantified interaction network data for previously unstudied tritrophic cynipid communities in Sichuan, China, where, in addition to Quercus, cynipid host plants include Castanea, Castanopsis and Lithocarpus. We characterise these communities taxonomically and compare the extent to which host plant taxonomy predicts plant–herbivore and plant–parasitoid associations. We sampled 42,620 cynipid galls of 176 morphotypes from 23 host plant species, yielding over 4500 specimens of 64 parasitoid morphospecies. Many parasitoids were identifiable to chalcidoid taxa present in other Holarctic oak cynipid communities, with the addition of Cynipencyrtus (Cynipencyrtidae). As elsewhere, Sichuan parasitoid assemblages were dominated by generalists. Gallwasp–plant interaction networks were significantly more modular than parasitoid–plant association networks. Gallwasps were significantly more specialised to host plants (i.e. had higher mean d' values) than parasitoids. Parasitoid assemblages nevertheless showed significant plant‐associated beta diversity, with a dominant turnover component. We summarise parallels between our study and other Fagaceae‐associated cynipid communities and discuss our findings in light of the processes thought to structure tritrophic interactions centred on endophytic insect herbivores.

Funder

Genetics Society

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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