Environmental degradation amplifies species' responses to temperature variation in a trophic interaction

被引:4
|
作者
Mugabo, Marianne [1 ]
Gilljam, David [2 ,4 ]
Petteway, Laura [1 ]
Yuan, Chenggui [3 ]
Fowler, Mike S. [2 ]
Sait, Steven M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Leeds, Fac Biol Sci, Sch Biol, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England
[2] Swansea Univ, Coll Sci, Dept Biosci, Dynam Ecol Grp, Swansea, W Glam, Wales
[3] Swansea Univ, Coll Sci, Maths Dept, Swansea, W Glam, Wales
[4] Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Dept Aquat Resources, Oregrund, Sweden
基金
英国自然环境研究理事会;
关键词
climate change; environmental variation; habitat modification; host-parasitoid; life-history trajectories; phenological mismatch; population cycles; population dynamics; PREDATOR-PREY CYCLES; POPULATION-DYNAMICS; INTRASPECIFIC COMPETITION; HABITAT FRAGMENTATION; PLODIA-INTERPUNCTELLA; THERMAL-ACCLIMATION; VENTURIA-CANESCENS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; HOST; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1111/1365-2656.13069
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Land-use and climate change are two of the primary drivers of the current biodiversity crisis. However, we lack understanding of how single-species and multispecies associations are affected by interactions between multiple environmental stressors. We address this gap by examining how environmental degradation interacts with daily stochastic temperature variation to affect individual life history and population dynamics in a host-parasitoid trophic interaction, using the Indian meal moth, Plodia interpunctella, and its parasitoid wasp Venturia canescens. We carried out a single-generation individual life-history experiment and a multigeneration microcosm experiment during which individuals and microcosms were maintained at a mean temperature of 26 degrees C that was either kept constant or varied stochastically, at four levels of host resource degradation, in the presence or absence of parasitoids. At the individual level, resource degradation increased juvenile development time and decreased adult body size in both species. Parasitoids were more sensitive to temperature variation than their hosts, with a shorter juvenile stage duration than in constant temperatures and a longer adult life span in moderately degraded environments. Resource degradation also altered the host's response to temperature variation, leading to a longer juvenile development time at high resource degradation. At the population level, moderate resource degradation amplified the effects of temperature variation on host and parasitoid populations compared with no or high resource degradation and parasitoid overall abundance was lower in fluctuating temperatures. Top-down regulation by the parasitoid and bottom-up regulation driven by resource degradation contributed to more than 50% of host and parasitoid population responses to temperature variation. Our results demonstrate that environmental degradation can strongly affect how species in a trophic interaction respond to short-term temperature fluctuations through direct and indirect trait-mediated effects. These effects are driven by species differences in sensitivity to environmental conditions and modulate top-down (parasitism) and bottom-up (resource) regulation. This study highlights the need to account for differences in the sensitivity of species' traits to environmental stressors to understand how interacting species will respond to simultaneous anthropogenic changes.
引用
收藏
页码:1657 / 1669
页数:13
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