Modeling the decline and potential recovery of a native butterfly following serial invasions by exotic species
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  • 作者:Tegan A. L. Morton ; Alexandra Thorn ; J. Michael Reed…
  • 关键词:Enemy ; free space ; Pieris ; Tri ; trophic interaction ; Novel host ; Alliaria petiolata
  • 刊名:Biological Invasions
  • 出版年:2015
  • 出版时间:June 2015
  • 年:2015
  • 卷:17
  • 期:6
  • 页码:1683-1695
  • 全文大小:964 KB
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  • 作者单位:Tegan A. L. Morton (1)
    Alexandra Thorn (1) (4)
    J. Michael Reed (1)
    Roy G. Van Driesche (2)
    Richard A. Casagrande (3)
    Frances S. Chew (1)

    1. Department of Biology, Tufts University, Medford, MA, 02155, USA
    4. Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, 03824, USA
    2. Department of Entomology, Plant, Soil and Insect Sciences, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, 01002, USA
    3. Department of Plant Science and Entomology, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI, 02881, USA
  • 刊物类别:Biomedical and Life Sciences
  • 刊物主题:Life Sciences
    Plant Sciences
    Ecology
    Hydrobiology
    Zoology
    Forestry
  • 出版者:Springer Netherlands
  • ISSN:1573-1464
文摘
Population sizes and range of the native butterfly Pieris oleracea declined after habitat loss and parasitism by an exotic braconid wasp (Cotesia glomerata) introduced to control the exotic invasive butterfly Pieris rapae. Further declines are attributed to the invasive exotic weed garlic mustard (Alliaria petiolata), an oviposition sensory trap on which P. oleracea larval survival and growth are very poor. But a population of P. oleracea has adapted to garlic mustard over the past several decades, coincident with the introduction of a second parasitoid, C. rubecula, a specialist on P. rapae that is competitively dominant to C. glomerata. We used stochastic simulation models to assess the plausibility of a hypothesis that reduced parasitoid pressure over this time period enabled P. oleracea to adapt to A. petiolata. We simulated scenarios of trait proliferation via spontaneous mutation or immigration of the trait, and residual variation in the trait following the butterfly’s isolation in North America. Results indicate that the most likely scenario for the population that has adapted to garlic mustard includes (1) a change in selection following garlic mustard invasion to favor previously neutral residual variation in the population, (2) release from parasitism, and (3) evolution of improved larval survival on garlic mustard, which allowed an increased host range, and potentially, population size.

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