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Her Majesty’s Desert Throne: The Ecology of Queen Butterfly Oviposition on Mojave Milkweed Host Plants

机译:她的陛下的沙漠王位:Mojave Milkweed Host植物的女王蝴蝶卵体的生态

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Butterfly–host plant relationships can inform our understanding of ecological and trophic interactions that contribute to ecosystem function, resiliency, and services. The ecology of danaid–milkweed (Apocynaceae) host plant interactions has been studied in several biomes but is neglected in deserts. Our objective was to determine effects of plant traits, seasonality, and landscape-level host plant availability on selection of Mojave milkweed ( Asclepias nyctaginifolia A. Gray) by ovipositing monarch butterflies ( Danaus plexippus plexippus ) and queen butterflies ( Danaus gilippus thersippus ) in the Californian Mojave Desert. We surveyed all known Mojave milkweed locations in the Ivanpah Valley, California ( n = 419) during early, mid-, and late spring in 2017. For each survey, we counted monarch and queen butterfly eggs on each Mojave milkweed plant. We also measured canopy cover, height, volume, and reproductive stage of each Mojave milkweed plant. We counted a total of 276 queen butterfly eggs and zero monarch butterfly eggs on Mojave milkweed host plants. We determined that count of queen butterfly eggs significantly increased with increasing Mojave milkweed canopy cover. Additionally, count of queen butterfly eggs was: (1) greater on adult Mojave milkweed plants than on juvenile and seedling plants and greater on juvenile Mojave milkweed plants than on seedling plants; and (2) greater during early spring than mid-spring—we recorded no eggs during late spring. Based on aggregation indices, queen butterfly eggs occurred on Mojave milkweed plants in a nonrandom, clustered pattern throughout the Ivanpah Valley. We provide the first evidence of trophic interactions between queen butterflies and Mojave milkweed at multiple spatial scales in the Mojave Desert, suggesting that conservation and management practices for both species should be implemented concurrently. Given its role as an herbivore, pollinator and prey, the queen butterfly may serve as a model organism for understanding effects of anthropogenic disturbance (e.g., solar energy development) on “bottom-up” and trophic interactions among soils, plants and animals in desert ecosystems.
机译:蝴蝶 - 宿主植物关系可以告知我们对生态和营养互动的理解,这有助于生态系统功能,弹性和服务。在几种生物群体中研究了丹参乳草(Apocynaceae)宿主植物相互作用的生态学,但在沙漠中被忽视。我们的目标是确定植物特征,季节性和景观级主机植物在选择莫哈韦乳草(Asclepias nyctaginifolia A.灰色)的植物特征的影响加利福尼亚莫哈韦沙漠。我们在2017年初,春季和傍晚的春季和末期春季和春季伊凡达谷的所有已知的Mojave Milking位置调查了所有已知的Mojave Milking地点。对于每次调查,我们在每个Mojave Milkweed植物上算了君主和女王蝴蝶鸡蛋。我们还测量了每个Mojave Milkweed植物的冠层覆盖,高度,体积和生殖阶段。我们在Mojave Milkweed Host植物中算了276个女王蝴蝶蛋和零君主蝴蝶蛋。随着Mojave Milkweed Canopy Cancopy覆盖的增加,我们确定了大号蝴蝶蛋的数量显着增加。此外,女王蝴蝶蛋的计数是:(1)在成人Mojave乳草植物上大于青少年和幼苗植物,在幼苗植物上少年和幼苗含奶草植物更大; (2)春季春季比春季更大 - 我们在春季后期没有鸡蛋。基于聚合指数,在莫哈韦奶草植物中发生了女王蝴蝶鸡蛋,在伊凡果山谷中的莫哈韦奶草植物。我们提供了莫哈韦沙漠中的多个空间鳞片之间的女王蝴蝶和莫哈韦奶草之间的第一个营养互动的证据,这表明两种物种的保护和管理实践应同时实施。鉴于其作为食草动物,粉丝和猎物的作用,女王蝴蝶可以作为理解人为扰动(例如,太阳能发育)对土壤,植物和动物在沙漠中的“自下而上”和营养互动的影响的模型生物体生态系统。

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