Literature DB >> 28146344

Phylogenetic composition of host plant communities drives plant-herbivore food web structure.

Martin Volf1,2, Petr Pyszko3, Tomokazu Abe4, Martin Libra1,2, Nela Kotásková3, Martin Šigut3, Rajesh Kumar5, Ondřej Kaman1,2, Philip T Butterill1,2, Jan Šipoš3,6, Haruka Abe7, Hiroaki Fukushima7, Pavel Drozd3, Naoto Kamata4, Masashi Murakami7, Vojtech Novotny1,2.   

Abstract

Insects tend to feed on related hosts. The phylogenetic composition of host plant communities thus plays a prominent role in determining insect specialization, food web structure, and diversity. Previous studies showed a high preference of insect herbivores for congeneric and confamilial hosts suggesting that some levels of host plant relationships may play more prominent role that others. We aim to quantify the effects of host phylogeny on the structure of quantitative plant-herbivore food webs. Further, we identify specific patterns in three insect guilds with different life histories and discuss the role of host plant phylogeny in maintaining their diversity. We studied herbivore assemblages in three temperate forests in Japan and the Czech Republic. Sampling from a canopy crane, a cherry picker and felled trees allowed a complete census of plant-herbivore interactions within three 0·1 ha plots for leaf chewing larvae, miners, and gallers. We analyzed the effects of host phylogeny by comparing the observed food webs with randomized models of host selection. Larval leaf chewers exhibited high generality at all three sites, whereas gallers and miners were almost exclusively monophagous. Leaf chewer generality dropped rapidly when older host lineages (5-80 myr) were collated into a single lineage but only decreased slightly when the most closely related congeneric hosts were collated. This shows that leaf chewer generality has been maintained by feeding on confamilial hosts while only a few herbivores were shared between more distant plant lineages and, surprisingly, between some congeneric hosts. In contrast, miner and galler generality was maintained mainly by the terminal nodes of the host phylogeny and dropped immediately after collating congeneric hosts into single lineages. We show that not all levels of host plant phylogeny are equal in their effect on structuring plant-herbivore food webs. In the case of generalist guilds, it is the phylogeny of deeper plant lineages that drives the food web structure whereas the terminal relationships play minor roles. In contrast, the specialization and abundance of monophagous guilds are affected mainly by the terminal parts of the plant phylogeny and do not generally reflect deeper host phylogeny.
© 2017 The Authors. Journal of Animal Ecology © 2017 British Ecological Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  diversity; gallers; generality; herbivory; leaf chewers; miners; phylogeny; specialization

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28146344     DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.12646

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Anim Ecol        ISSN: 0021-8790            Impact factor:   5.091


  5 in total

1.  Diversification rates, host plant shifts and an updated molecular phylogeny of Andean Eois moths (Lepidoptera: Geometridae).

Authors:  Patrick Strutzenberger; Gunnar Brehm; Brigitte Gottsberger; Florian Bodner; Carlo Lutz Seifert; Konrad Fiedler
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-12-27       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Vertical canopy gradient shaping the stratification of leaf-chewer-parasitoid interactions in a temperate forest.

Authors:  Martin Šigut; Hana Šigutová; Jan Šipoš; Petr Pyszko; Nela Kotásková; Pavel Drozd
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2018-06-27       Impact factor: 2.912

3.  Quantitative assessment of plant-arthropod interactions in forest canopies: A plot-based approach.

Authors:  Martin Volf; Petr Klimeš; Greg P A Lamarre; Conor M Redmond; Carlo L Seifert; Tomokazu Abe; John Auga; Kristina Anderson-Teixeira; Yves Basset; Saul Beckett; Philip T Butterill; Pavel Drozd; Erika Gonzalez-Akre; Ondřej Kaman; Naoto Kamata; Benita Laird-Hopkins; Martin Libra; Markus Manumbor; Scott E Miller; Kenneth Molem; Ondřej Mottl; Masashi Murakami; Tatsuro Nakaji; Nichola S Plowman; Petr Pyszko; Martin Šigut; Jan Šipoš; Robert Tropek; George D Weiblen; Vojtech Novotny
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-10-23       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Plant phylogeny drives arboreal caterpillar assemblages across the Holarctic.

Authors:  Carlo L Seifert; Martin Volf; Leonardo R Jorge; Tomokazu Abe; Grace Carscallen; Pavel Drozd; Rajesh Kumar; Greg P A Lamarre; Martin Libra; Maria E Losada; Scott E Miller; Masashi Murakami; Geoffrey Nichols; Petr Pyszko; Martin Šigut; David L Wagner; Vojtěch Novotný
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2020-11-07       Impact factor: 2.912

5.  Great chemistry between us: The link between plant chemical defenses and butterfly evolution.

Authors:  Corné F H van der Linden; Michiel F WallisDeVries; Sabrina Simon
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2021-05-27       Impact factor: 2.912

  5 in total

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