Long-term community dynamics of aphidophagous coccinellids in response to repeated invasion in a diverse agricultural landscape Christie Bahlai *, Manuel.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
SUCCESSION AND STABILITY
Advertisements

Chapter 7 Community Ecology.
Invasive Species The Ladybird’s Tale Group 4 Deborah Fraga Lisette Buding May Anne Mata Sebastian Graiff Thales Kronenberger IV Southern-Summer School.
Non GM Methods of Controlling Aphids in Cereals Lawrence Woodward.
Nitrogen Mineralization Across an Atmospheric Nitrogen Deposition Gradient in Southern California Deserts Leela E. Rao 1, David R. Parker 1, Andrzej Bytnerowicz.
Effects of wheat/oilseed rape and wheat/pea associations on the diversity of aphids and aphidophagous beneficials Thomas Lopes 1*, Emilie Bosquée 1, David.
Principles of Landscape Ecology ENVS*3320 Instructors: Dr. Shelley Hunt (Module 1) Rm. 2226, Bovey Building x53065 Dr. Rob Corry (Module.
Landscape Ecology. I.A Landscape Perspective A. Integrating Communities and Ecosystems forest field.
Development of a diagnostic question cluster and post-assessment of college student understanding about population dynamics Miranda A. Kearney and Nancy.
Alexis A. Suazo Research Assistant Public Lands Institute University of Nevada Las Vegas.
Integrated Pest Management (IPM). What is a pest organism? What is a pest organism? Depends on who is defining it!
Null models and observed patterns of native and exotic diversity: Does native richness repel invasion? Rebecca L. Brown, 1,2 Jason D. Fridley, 1 and John.
Detecting Temporal Trends In Species Assemblages With Randomization Procedures And Hierarchical Models Nick Gotelli University of Vermont USA.
15 The Nature of Communities. 15 The Nature of Communities Case Study: “Killer Algae!” What Are Communities? Community Structure Interactions of Multiple.
Impact of Fragmentation and Roads on Albany Pine Bush Dr. James Danoff-Burg Dept. Ecology, Evolution, & Environmental Biology Columbia University NY, NY.
Ecology: Lecture 17 Community structure.
The effect of exotic invasives on diversity Loren Hintz Bio255 Oct. 21, 2004.
9/17/071 Community Properties Reading assignment: Chapter 9 in GSF.
Robertson, G. P. and S. K. Hamilton Long-term ecological research in agricultural landscapes at the Kellogg Biological Station LTER site: conceptual.
Climate Change and its impact on Forests in Europe and North America Andrew J. R. Gillespie, Ph. D. United States Environmental Protection Agency.
Ecosystem processes and heterogeneity Landscape Ecology.
OUR Ecological Footprint …. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity.
Weeds The Cancer of Our Land. Why Care? “The spread of noxious weeds may signal the decline of entire ecological watersheds. They severely impact the.
Native Bees Along Elevation Gradients as Bioindicators of Climate Change Scott Daniels 1, Dave Smith 2, Neil Cobb 3 1. Cesar Chavez High School, Laveen,
U6115: Populations & Land Use Tuesday July 8, 2003 What is Biodiversity Importance of Biodiversity Levels of Biodiversity Threats to Biodiversity Patterns.
UNIT VOCABULARY & NOTES Stability and Change. Ecological succession (succession) Process in which communities of plant and animal species in a particular.
CONCLUSIONCONCLUSION MATERIALS & METHODS INTRODUCTIONINTRODUCTION Dany Silvio S.L. Amaral 1, Madelaine Venzon 2, Helder H. Santos 2, Marcus V. A. Duarte.
Lacewings Predatory Flies Ladybird Beetles Parasitic Wasps Predatory Bugs TEMPERATURE DROUGHT SOY LONGITUDE LATITUDE OTHER AGRICULTURE GRASSLAND FOREST.
Tuesday 11:00 – 1:50 Thursday 11:00 – 1:50 Instructor: Nancy Wheat Ecology Bio 47 Spring 2015.
Species Abundance and Diversity
Interactions Within Ecosystems
Figure 2.1. Grain yields at KBS LTER under No-till, Reduced Input, and Biologically Based management relative to Conventional management (dotted horizontal.
Landis, D. A. and S. H. Gage Arthropod diversity and pest suppression in agricultural landscapes. Pages in S. K. Hamilton, J. E. Doll, and.
STRATIFICATION PLOT PLACEMENT CONTROLS Strategy for Monitoring Post-fire Rehabilitation Treatments Troy Wirth and David Pyke USGS – Biological Resources.
Research programmes in ecology Jacques Baudry 1, Françoise Burel 2, and Agnès Ricroch 3 1 INRA of Rennes, 2 University of Rennes/CNRS, 3 University of.
Option G: Ecology and Conservation Chpt. 18: pages
NSF/NASA The role of taxonomic, functional, genetic, and landscape diversity in food web responses to a changing environment Anthony R. Ives,
Are you a nine-spotted ladybug? No! My name is Harmonia axyridis, the multi-colored Asian ladybug. As you guessed from my name I come in different patterns.
Workshop on modern biology & its social impacts 2-5 Dec 2007, Xishuanbanna, Yunnan, China Environmental Impacts of GM Crops for Insect-Resistance Yufa.
Fire-climate-vegetation- topography-land use What drives and determines fire patterns across time and space? What are the implications of global climate.
COMMUNITY ECOLOGY. OBJECTIVES: Describe types of relationships among organisms. Compare primary and secondary succession.
What shapes an ecosystem? Section 14-1 habitat & niche.
Landscape Ecology: Conclusions and Future Directions.
Saginaw Bay Phragmites Control and Restoration Demonstration Project Julie Sims MDEQ, Water Bureau SBCI Regional Update Meeting Bay City, MI June 5, 2009.
The hierarchical nature and processes of different levels of ecological systems:
Trends in numbers of Invaders: Part II By Issy Cless and Amber Orr.
Biodiversity Biology ATAR Year 11 Biology 1AB Biology 3AB.
Effects of simulated climate change on the abundance of an exotic weevil, Cyrtepistomus castaneus Bryan Marbert (ASU ) and Paul Hanson (ORNL) Contact Information:
Figure 7.1. Variation in weed species composition in relation to crop grown in the four annual cropping systems of the Main Cropping System Experiment.
Global Change and Southern California Ecosystems Rebecca Aicher UCI GK-12 March 7, 2009.
Results I) Regional Survey Rarefaction curves leveled off across sites, suggesting that the sample effort was sufficient to capture differences between.
Evolution of Biodiversity
Thursday Sept 12/Friday Sept 13 AGENDA Stamp and review homework Activity: Interactions Among Organisms Notes: Populations in Ecosystems HOMEWORK Read.
Establishing the Scientific Basis for Ecosystem Management On the Upper Mississippi River Dr. Ken Lubinski, USGS Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center.
More Ecosystems Red Spruce – Fraser Fir Forest in the Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina Grassland on rolling hills in North Dakota Mid-montane conifer.
Chapter 7 Community Ecology. Case Study Read and summarize.
Species richness The number of species is an important biological variable that scientists try to quantify.
Continental Lynx Movement Study. To understand the predator...
The Effect of Fuel Treatments on the Invasion of Nonnative Plants Kyle E. Merriam 1, Jon E. Keeley 1, and Jan L. Beyers 2. [1] USGS Western Ecological.
Ecology --- primary definition The scientific study of how organisms interact with the natural world.
Climate Sensitivity Succession Regime Shifts Integration Current Proposal: The Dynamics of Change Next Proposal (due in < 4 years!!) Human Dimensions K-12.
Gabriela Nunez-Mir and Songlin Fei
II. Abundance is highest in the wildflower treatment.
Community interactions are classified by whether they help, harm, or have no effect on the species involved Ecologists call relationships between species.
Functional and evolutionary entomology
Introduced Species.
How does a species become invasive?
Nathan Servey, Brennan Dow, Brittany Burant and Mason Loden
Community interactions are classified by whether they help, harm, or have no effect on the species involved Ecologists call relationships between species.
Floral resources support higher abundances of beneficial insects
Presentation transcript:

Long-term community dynamics of aphidophagous coccinellids in response to repeated invasion in a diverse agricultural landscape Christie Bahlai *, Manuel Colunga-Garcia, Stuart Gage, and Douglas Landis Kellogg Biological Station, Department of Entomology, Michigan State University *contact: Center for Integrated Plant Systems Laboratory, Room 204, 578 Wilson Rd., East Lansing, MI, USA Background We found that competitive exclusion from agricultural habitats by invading species is likely playing a major role in the decline of several formerly-dominant native species. Several native species ( Adalia bipunctata and Coccinella trifasciata ) persist at low numbers in semi- natural forest habitats embedded in agricultural landscapes but are no longer observed in cultivated habitat (Fig 5). This finding provides support to Evans’ 3 habitat compression hypothesis, a consequence of competitive exclusion in which native coccinellid species ‘retreat’ to ancestral habitats when resources in these habitats become depleted by exotic species that have co-evolved with cultivated habitats. We found that the herbivore suppression potential of the ladybeetle community remained roughly constant since the initiation of the study (Fig. 5), and Shannon diversity of the community increased slightly (Fig 6). These results suggest that, despite invasions, the coccinellid community is still capable of providing the same level of pest suppression ecosystem service. However, declines in biodiversity are likely to occur if semi-natural habitats within the agricultural matrix are lost. Future work will explore niche interactions for species within the community and examine population cycling of individual species in the context of resource availability References 1. Gordon, R. D The Coccinellidae (Coleoptera) of America North of Mexico. Journal of the New York Entomological Society 93: i Harmon, J. P., et al The decline of native coccinellids (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) in the United States and Canada. Journal of Insect Conservation 11: Evans, E.W Habitat displacement of North American ladybirds by an introduced species. Ecology 85: Snyder, W.E., Coccinellids in diverse communities: Which niche fits? Biological Control, : Bahlai, C.A., R.M. Weiss, and R.H. Hallett A mechanistic model for a tritrophic interaction involving soybean aphid, its host plants, and multiple natural enemies. Ecological Modelling 254: The Kellogg Biological Station Long-Term Ecological Research site is funded by the National Science Foundation Fig. 1. Aggregation of Harmonia axyridis, an exotic species. This species has become very abundant in central North America since Photo by Morgan Jackson, Fig. 2. Multiple ladybeetle invasions in southern Michigan. Four exotic species have invaded the coccinellid community at KBS. In 1985 Coccinella septempunctata became established, followed by Harmonia axyridis in 1993, Hippodamia variegata in 1997, and Propylea quatuordecimpunctata in 2007 Fig. 3. Exotic species increasingly dominate captures of coccinellids at KBS. Only one native coccinellid species continues to appear in great numbers at KBS: Coleomegilla maculata reaches relatively high numbers in years when maize is planted at the site. This species is omnivorous and is known to feed on maize pollen. Fig. 4. Coccinellid captures vary dramatically from year to year. Several species appear to have characteristic boom-bust population cycles; others respond numerically to sporadic pest outbreaks. Fig. 4. Coccinellid communities vary significantly between habitats (ANOSIM, Global R =0.295, p=0.001). Non-metric multidimensional scaling of coccinellid captures by habitat type with distances in figure represent Bray –Curtis similarity of fourth root transformed coccinellid captures. Fig. 5. Captures of three key coccinellid species by habitat changed relative to each other. Harmonia axyridis is an exotic species that reached very high densities in , coinciding with the establishment of soybean aphid, an invasive crop pest. During this time, habitat use patterns of Coccinella trifasciata and Adalia bipunctata changed (arrows): these species moved out of cultivated habitat and were only recovered in unmanaged forest sites. Fig. 7. Average herbivore suppression potential of coccinellids captured on traps in three habitats remained roughly constant over the course of the study, but became more variable during , coinciding with extremely high numbers of Harmonia axyridis. Gaussian smoothing lines are used to visualize trends. Each growing season since 1989, coccinellid populations have been monitored weekly in a variety of habitats at the KBS-LTER in southwestern Michigan (Fig. 4). Coccinellid captures on yellow sticky traps were recorded in annual crops of maize, soybean, wheat (in three year rotation), perennial crops of alfalfa, poplar, and early successional vegetation and in unmanaged forest plots including coniferous, deciduous and successional forest. Previous work has suggested that communities of natural enemies vary along a management intensity gradient, so we grouped plots into three habitat types by management/disturbance intensity: annual crops, perennial crops, and forests (Fig. 5). We examined these data in the context of several hypotheses regarding invasions and mechanisms of native species decline in coccinellids, 3,4 and evaluated the diversity and herbivore suppression potential of the community from the time the study was initiated to present. We examined the time-series captures of each coccinellid species by habitat type to identify changes in habitat use (Fig. 6). Shannon diversity was computed for each plot by year (Fig. 7). Herbivore suppression potential was computed using estimates of voracity for a given species to weight their abundance, and then summed across all species (Fig 8). 5 Approach Fig. 6. Average Shannon index of captured coccinellids, per plot, per week, in three habitats increased over time, but was decreased in , coinciding with extremely high numbers of Harmonia axyridis. Gaussian smoothing lines are used to visualize trends. Discussion Aphidophagous ladybeetles (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) are important providers of herbivore suppression in aqgroecosystems. 1 In the last 30 years, the invasion of exotic coccinellid species coupled with observed declines in native species has led to renewed interest in the community dynamics and ecosystem function of this guild (Fig 1). 2 Several hypotheses have been proposed to describe the mechanism of invasion coupled with native species declines (i.e. vacant niche exploitation, competitive displacement and habitat compression, intraguild predation), 3,4 and the relationship of this decline to biodiversity and herbivore suppression. We examined the response of coccinellid communities at the Kellogg Biological Station Long-Term Ecological Research (KBS-LTER) site to invasion. Since 1985, the resident coccinellid community has been invaded by four species (Fig. 2) and is increasingly dominated by non-native species (Fig. 3).