Sucking herbivore assemblage composition on greenhouse Ficus correlates with host plant leaf architecture
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  • 作者:Yevhen Sosnovsky
  • 关键词:Feeding guild ; Greenhouse ; Herbivore species number ; Host selectivity trends ; Leaf anatomy ; Plant colonization degree
  • 刊名:Arthropod-Plant Interactions
  • 出版年:2016
  • 出版时间:February 2016
  • 年:2016
  • 卷:10
  • 期:1
  • 页码:55-69
  • 全文大小:828 KB
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  • 作者单位:Yevhen Sosnovsky (1)

    1. Botanical Garden of Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, 44 Cheremshyna Str., Lviv, 79014, Ukraine
  • 刊物主题:Entomology; Invertebrates; Plant Sciences; Ecology; Behavioural Sciences; Plant Pathology;
  • 出版者:Springer Netherlands
  • ISSN:1872-8847
文摘
Understanding arthropod herbivore selectivity trends towards host plant attributes is essential for predicting plant-associated herbivore assemblage structure. Little is known about such interactions between spontaneous herbivore species and cultivated plants under specific conditions of botanical garden greenhouses. In this study, the taxonomic and functional composition of sucking arthropod herbivore assemblages were correlated with leaf anatomical and surface features of 33 host species of Ficus L. (Moraceae) across four distantly located greenhouse complexes of botanical gardens. The analyses revealed that the species number and abundance of scale insects and their individual families, sessile phloem feeders, total phloem feeders and total herbivores were significantly positively correlated with the thickness of leaf lamina, epidermis and mesophyll, stomatal length and width, and the presence of abaxial multiple epidermis and weak ferruginous non-glandular trichomes. Significant negative correlations were revealed between the same herbivore parameters and the density of glandular trichomes. Heliomorphic leaves supported higher abundance and species richness of sessile phloem feeders compared to sciomorphic ones. The parameters of some phloem and mesophyll feeder taxa also correlated with non-glandular trichome length and density, type of trichomes and epicuticular wax layer, and the presence of calcium oxalate crystals in the epidermis. Results of the study suggest that the leaf architecture-related herbivory trends under greenhouse conditions are similar to those occurring in natural ecosystems when considering the functional significance of particular leaf traits, and remain relevant at the scale of particular plant taxa with disregard of spatial factor. Keywords Feeding guild Greenhouse Herbivore species number Host selectivity trends Leaf anatomy Plant colonization degree

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