| Literature DB >> 24795845 |
Marie-Caroline Lefort1, Stéphane Boyer1, Saïana De Romans2, Travis Glare1, Karen Armstrong1, Susan Worner1.
Abstract
Only recently has it been formally acknowledged that native species can occasionally reach the status of 'pest' or 'invasive species' within their own native range. The study of such species has potential to help unravel fundamental aspects of biological invasions. A good model for such a study is the New Zealand native scarab beetle, Costelytra zealandica (White), which even in the presence of its natural enemies has become invasive in exotic pastures throughout the country. Because C. zealandica still occurs widely within its native habitat, we hypothesised that this species has only undergone a host range expansion (ability to use equally both an ancestral and new host) onto exotic hosts rather than a host shift (loss of fitness on the ancestral host in comparison to the new host). Moreover, this host range expansion could be one of the main drivers of its invasion success. In this study, we investigated the fitness response of populations of C. zealandica from native and exotic flora, to several feeding treatments comprising its main exotic host plant as well as one of its ancestral hosts. Our results suggest that our initial hypothesis was incorrect and that C. zealandica populations occurring in exotic pastures have experienced a host-shift rather than simply a host-range expansion. This finding suggests that an exotic plant introduction can facilitate the evolution of a distinct native host-race, a phenomenon often used as evidence for speciation in phytophagous insects and which may have been instrumental to the invasion success of C. zealandica.Entities:
Keywords: Biotype; Costelytra zealandica; Exotic host plant; Host-race; Native invader; Scarab
Year: 2014 PMID: 24795845 PMCID: PMC3940619 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.262
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Larval survival of two populations of Costelytra zealandica during 12 weeks of feeding treatment with tussock, clover or with a combination of the two plants.
Kaplan Meier plot of survival during the 12 weeks of feeding treatment. Right: final survival after 12 weeks. Population A (dark colored bars) was collected from exotic pastures and population B (light colored bars) was collected from New Zealand native grasslands. All pairwise comparisons were performed using chi-squared tests after 12 weeks of treatment. Only significant differences are indicated on the figure (p < 0.001∗∗∗ and p < 0.01∗∗).
Figure 2Cumulative weight gain of two populations of Costelytra zealandica larvae following 12 weeks of artificial host-shift feeding treatment, where larvae were fed for 7 weeks on tussock and 5 weeks on clover.
Population A (dark grey line) (n = 17) was collected from exotic pastures and population B (light grey line) (n = 24) from New Zealand native grasslands. Vertical bars represent 5% LSDs (Least Significant Difference) at the end of each week of treatment.
Figure 3Cumulative weight gain of Costelytra zealandica larvae collected from exotic pasture following 12 weeks of feeding treatment on various host plants.
The native tussock feeding treatment (T1) appears in dark grey (n = 6), the clover feeding treatment (T2) in light grey (n = 26) and the artificial host-shift feeding treatment (T3) in medium grey (n = 17). Vertical bars represent 5% LSDs (Least Significant Difference) at the end of each week of treatment.