| Literature DB >> 26644985 |
Marie-Caroline Lefort1, Stéphane Boyer2, Jessica Vereijssen3, Rowan Sprague4, Travis R Glare4, Susan P Worner4.
Abstract
Widespread replacement of native ecosystems by productive land sometimes results in the outbreak of a native species. In New Zealand, the introduction of exotic pastoral plants has resulted in diet alteration of the native coleopteran species, Costelytra zealandica (White) (Scarabaeidae) such that this insect has reached the status of pest. In contrast, C. brunneum (Broun), a congeneric species, has not developed such a relationship with these 'novel' host plants. This study investigated the feeding preferences and fitness performance of these two closely related scarab beetles to increase fundamental knowledge about the mechanisms responsible for the development of invasive characteristics in native insects. To this end, the feeding preference of third instar larvae of both Costelytra species was investigated using an olfactometer device, and the survival and larval growth of the invasive species C. zealandica were compared on native and exotic host plants. Costelytra zealandica, when sampled from exotic pastures, was unable to fully utilise its ancestral native host and showed higher feeding preference and performance on exotic plants. In contrast, C. zealandica sampled from native grasslands did not perform significantly better on either host and showed similar feeding preferences to C. brunneum, which exhibited no feeding preference. This study suggests the possibility of strong intraspecific variation in the ability of C. zealandica to exploit native or exotic plants, supporting the hypothesis that such ability underpins the existence of distinct host-races in this species.Entities:
Keywords: Feeding preferences; Grass grub; Invasive species; Native invader; New Zealand; Plant-insect interactions
Year: 2015 PMID: 26644985 PMCID: PMC4671192 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1454
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Location map for Costelytra zealandica and C. brunneum sample sites.
General description and location for Costelytra zealandica and C. brunneum sample sites.
| Site | Location | Coordinates | Site description and dominant group of plants | Species sampled and population indexing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | Lincoln (NZ, South Island) | 43°64′04″S 172°47′82″E | Mixed exotic ryegrass ( | |
| B | Hororata (NZ, South Island) | 43°32′17″S 171°57′16″E | Mixed exotic ryegrass ( | |
| C | Cass (NZ, South Island) | 43°02′10″S 171°45′40″E | Native tussock grassland ( | |
| D | Castle Hill (NZ, South Island) | 43°12′20″S 171°42′16″E | Native tussock grassland ( |
|
Figure 2Plant choice of larvae of three populations of Costelytra in a three-arm olfactometer.
With choices of C. zealandica population B collected from exotic pastures, C. zealandica population C collected from native tussock grassland, and C. brunneum population D collected from native tussock grassland. ∗∗ indicates p < 0.01 and ns indicates p > 0.05.
Figure 3Percentage of larval survival of Costelytra zealandica from site A (collected from exotic pasture) and site C (collected from native tussock grassland) after 15 weeks of feeding on tussock (yellow bars) and white clover (green bars) host plants.
∗ indicates p < 0.05 and ns indicates p > 0.05.
ANCOVA—effect of different host plant diet on the average weight gain of Costelytra zealandica larvae controlling for their initial weight.
| Species (sampling site) |
|
| 5% significance level | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Treatment | 1 | 12.257 | 0.001 | *** |
| Covariate (initial weight) | 1 | 0.001 | 0.978 | ns |
| Error | 54 | |||
|
| ||||
| Treatment | 1 | 3.691 | 0.068 | ns |
| Covariate (initial weight) | 1 | 0.190 | 0.667 | ns |
| Error | 22 |
Figure 4Average fresh weight gain (+1SE) of larvae of Costelytra zealandica from site A (collected from exotic pasture) and site C (collected from native tussock grassland) after 6 weeks of feeding on tussock (yellow bars) and clover (green bars) host plants.
Pairwise comparisons were performed using an ANCOVA with the initial weight of the larvae as covariate. ∗∗∗ indicates p < 0.001 and ns indicates p > 0.05.