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首页> 外文期刊>Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata >Ecological consequences of shelter sharing by leaf-tying caterpillars.
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Ecological consequences of shelter sharing by leaf-tying caterpillars.

机译:叶毛毛虫共用避难所的生态后果。

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摘要

A wide variety of insect herbivores construct and inhabit leaf shelters (ties, rolls, folds, and webs). Shelter construction can lead to a high rate of secondary occupation by other arthropods, including other species of constructors. The consequences for the inhabitants of secondarily occupying these shelters are currently unknown. In this study, we conducted field experiments to examine the fitness consequences (survival and attack by natural enemies) for caterpillars that (i) occupy a shelter with conspecifics vs. occur singly; and (ii) establish a new shelter vs. colonize a pre-existing one. In addition, we conducted factorial laboratory experiments to test the hypothesis that caterpillars sharing shelters with conspecifics might have reduced construction costs (a potential benefit of shelter-sharing or secondary occupation). Larvae of Psilocorsis quercicella Clemens (Lepidoptera: Oecophoridae) placed in white oak [Quercus alba L. (Fagaceae)] leaf ties alone or in groups of three had equal likelihood of survival from natural enemies. This same caterpillar species, however, had a higher disappearance rate when placed in pre-existing leaf ties than when placed in newly formed ones, suggesting a potential cost of secondary colonization. A similar experiment with a closely related species [Psilocorsis cryptolechiella (Chambers)], however, failed to detect a cost of secondarily occupying shelters made on beech, Fagus grandifolia Ehrh. (Fagaceae). In the laboratory experiment, we found no evidence of shelter-sharing benefits; rather larvae reared in shelters in groups of three had lower pupal mass (and thus lower potential fecundity) than larvae reared singly, suggesting a cost of shelter sharing. Moreover, groups of larvae forced to repeatedly construct new shelters tended to have reduced survival relative to the other treatment, suggesting that energetic constraints are more likely to reduce fitness when larvae cohabit shelters. Taken together, these results indicate that the common phenomenon of shelter sharing by leaf-tying caterpillars has either neutral or negative effects for the occupants. The fact that these leaf-tying caterpillars actually share shelters may simply reflect limited availability of oviposition sites..
机译:各种各样的昆虫食草动物构造并栖息于叶片遮蔽处(系带,卷,褶皱和网)。庇护所的建设可能导致其他节肢动物,包括其他种类的建筑工人,大量次要占领。目前尚不清楚第二居所对居民造成的后果。在这项研究中,我们进行了野外实验,以研究以下情况的毛虫的适应性后果(生存和天敌攻击):(i)住有特定物种的庇护所,而不是单独发生; (ii)建立一个新的庇护所,对一个既存的庇护所进行殖民化。此外,我们进行了析因实验室实验,以检验这样的假设:毛虫与特定物种共享庇护所可能会降低建筑成本(庇护所共享或第二职业的潜在好处)。放置在白橡[Quercus alba L.(Fagaceae)]的白橡树叶结中的毛状鞭毛虫幼虫(鳞翅目:Oecophoridae)的亲缘存活的可能性均等。但是,与放置在新形成的叶系中相比,这些相同的毛虫物种具有更高的消失率,这暗示了次级定殖的潜在成本。然而,对一个密切相关的物种[Psilocorsis cryptolechiella(Chambers)]进行的类似实验未能发现在次级山毛榉Fagus grandifolia Ehrh上第二次掩蔽的费用。 (菊科)。在实验室实验中,我们没有发现住房共享收益的证据。相对于单独饲养的幼体,在三人一组的避难所中饲养的幼虫的lower质量较低(因此潜在的繁殖力较低),这表明共享避难所的成本较高。此外,相对于其他治疗方法,被迫重复建造新庇护所的幼虫群体往往会降低生存率,这表明,当幼虫同居时,精力旺盛的约束更有可能降低健康状况。综上所述,这些结果表明,叶绑毛毛虫共享避难所的常见现象对居住者具有中性或负面影响。这些绑叶毛虫实际上共享庇护所这一事实可能仅反映了产卵场所的可用性有限。

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