| Literature DB >> 24163581 |
Michael Schmitt1, Meike Frank.
Abstract
A total of 301 adult hispine beetles of the genera Cephaloleia and Chelobasis were found in rolled leaves of plants of 17 species of Zingiberales (families Costaceae, Heliconiaceae, Maranthaceae, Musaceae, and Zingiberaceae) during a field study at La Gamba, Golfito region, Costa Rica. Of these beetles, Cephaloleia belti was recorded from 12 potential host plant species, C. distincta from 7, C. dilaticollis from 5, C., Chelobasis bicolor, C. championi, and C. histrionica from 3, Chelobasis perplexa and C. instabilis from 2, whereas C. trivittata from only one. Of the plant species, Heliconia latispatha had 7 beetle species in its leaf rolls, Calathea lutea had 5, H. imbricata and H. rostrata had 4, H. stricta and Musa paradisiaca had 3, H. wagneriana had 2, while on H. vaginalis, H. danielsiana, H. densiflora, H. longiflora, Calathea crotalifera, C. platystachya, Goeppertia lasiophylla, Alpinia purpurata, Costus pulverulentus and Costus barbatus, H. densiflora, H. vaginalis, and H. danielsana only hispines of one species were found. Cephaloleia belti occurred together with beetles of six other hispine species, whereas Cephaloleia trivittata never shared a leaf roll with another hispine species. The remaining beetle species aggregated with one to four other hispines. Adults of C. belti and C. championi were frequently seen, occasionally also with C. dilaticollis, C. histrionica, and Chelobasis perplexa, to co-occur with the carabid Calophaena ligata in the same leaf roll without any sign of interspecific aggression. A comparison of host choices and the phylogeny of the hispines and of their host plants revealed no signs that beetles used species level phylogenetic relationships within the Zingiberales to select food plants. Obviously, within this plant order, rolled-leaf hispines choose their plant hosts in a nearly opportunistic manner. Seemingly, they use differences among plants at higher taxonomic levels but within the Zingiberales, the availability of young - rolled - leaves might be the actual decisive factor.Entities:
Keywords: Cephaloleia; Chelobasis; Chrysomelidae; Coleoptera; Costa Rica; Costaceae; Heliconiaceae; Insecta; Maranthaceae; Musaceae; Zingiberaceae; Zingiberales; host plant; synecology
Year: 2013 PMID: 24163581 PMCID: PMC3805319 DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.332.5215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Zookeys ISSN: 1313-2970 Impact factor: 1.546
Figure 1.from an unrolled -leaf at La Gamba. M.Schmitt phot.
Figure 2., La Gamba. M. Frank phot.
Numbers of collected hispines and their potential host plants at La Gamba
| Zingiberales indet. | |||||||||
| Totals |
The unidentified Zingiberales grew outside the station garden and lacked inflorescences. We could not identify them using Weber et al.’s (2001) key.
Figure 3.Food web of the rolled-leaf hispines of La Gamba and their possible food plants based on the data in Table 1, drawn by hand using MS Powerpoint. Bold lines indicate more than ten beetle records on the respective plant. Numbers in parentheses give the number of plant or beetle “partners”, respectively. Beetle cladogram after McKenna and Farrell (2005), plant cladogram combined after Marouelli et al. (2010) and Janssen and Bremer (2004). , , and were – for some unknown reason - not included in these phylogenetic analyses.
Co-occurrence of rolled-leaf hispines in the same leaf roll at La Gamba.
| Chi2: 286.7 p: <0.001 | Chi2: 9.878 p: 0.003 | ||||||||||
| Chi2: 6.581 p: 0.087 | Chi2: 1.884 p: 0.227 | ||||||||||
| Chi2: 0.650 p: 0.778 | Chi2: 3.600 p: 0.080 | ||||||||||
| Chi2: 17.20 p: 0.001 | Chi2: 0.000 p: 1.000 | ||||||||||
| Chi2: n.a. p: n.a. | Chi2: n.a. p: n.a. | ||||||||||
| Chi2: n.a. p: n.a. | Chi2: n.a. p: n.a. | ||||||||||
| Chi2: n.a. p: n.a. | Chi2: n.a. p: n.a. | ||||||||||
| Chi2: n.a. p: n.a. | Chi2: n.a. p: n.a. | ||||||||||
| Chi2: n.a. p: n.a. | Chi2: n.a. p: n.a. | ||||||||||
Numbers in the cells indicate the numbers of beetles given in the first column co-occurring with beetles of species given in the same horizontal row, e.g.: 26 of the 170 were found together with . As in several cases beetles of more than two species were found in one leaf roll, the checksums in these cases are higher than the total numbers given in the first column. White cells mark the exclusively conspecific aggregations, pink cells indicate observed records, yellow and blue cells mean that these theoretically possible co-occurrences have not been found in the present study.
Column a: Chi2 and p-value for an aggregation of the species in the line with conspecifics or with any other species.
Column b: Chi2 and p-value for an aggregation of the species in the line with the pooled other hispines.
Figure 4.on an uncoiled -leaf. M. Schmitt phot.