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Egg Laying on Patchy Resources and the Importance of Spatial Scale

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posted on 2022-07-27, 22:36 authored by Hasenbank, Marc

Recent ecological studies have started integrate to spatial variation of ecological patterns into the study design rather than treating it as a statistical nuisance. In particular, the influence of the spatial scale at which ecological patterns are measured has gained much attention over the last two decades. Since, for example, sensory abilities as well as the ability to disperse vary among species, different species-specific responses to heterogeneous environments may be expected.

Plant-insect interactions in heterogeneous landscapes, in particular, have gained much attention as experiments can be conducted on a more accessible scale and may yield new applications for crop and horticulture. Two hypotheses that describe insect herbivore aggregations in the landscape are: a) the resource concentration hypothesis which predicts higher numbers of specialist insect herbivores per unit biomass in dense and pure stands of their host plant, and b) the resource dilution hypothesis which predicts that insect herbivore numbers will decline with increasing plant density. I investigated resource dilution and resource concentration patterns in egg distributions of Pieris rapae and Tyria jacobaeae in relation to host plant density, which I defined differently by applying varying spatial scales of measurement. I also tested for effects of host plant density and the scale of measurement on flight patterns of P. rapae females.

In a natural population of Lepidium oleraceum I investigated effects of scale of measurement of plant density, as well as white rust and hymenopteran parasitoids on P. rapae egg and larvae distributions. In a separate experiment I tested for any potential effects of arthropod predators on P. rapae egg distributions at different spatial scales. The number of P. rapae eggs per plant conformed to predictions made by the resource dilution hypothesis. However, such a pattern was only found for fine scale plant density but not for medium or coarse scale plant density. In contrast, the number of T. jacobaeae egg clutches per plant showed a resource concentration pattern for medium scale plant density but not for fine or coarse scale plant density. However, this result occurred only in one of two experiments with T. jacobaeae. A resource dilution pattern was also found for the number of visits per plant by P. rapae females at both coarse and fine scale measurement. Female flight paths were less directional when plants were present in the study area during fine scale observations and butterflies were attracted to areas containing host plants. Flight observations at coarse scale did not show any change in turning behaviour and butterflies moved at random across the study area. No effect of parasitism, or predation through arthropods was found on the distribution of P. rapae eggs. However, infection by white rust lead to a decreased number of eggs per plant in the natural L. oleraceum population. The results of my thesis underline the importance of spatial scale in ecological studies. Careful thought should be given to the scale of measurement and method of abstraction when describing real world patterns.

History

Copyright Date

2010-01-01

Date of Award

2010-01-01

Publisher

Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington

Rights License

Author Retains Copyright

Degree Discipline

Ecology and Biodiversity

Degree Grantor

Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington

Degree Level

Doctoral

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy

Victoria University of Wellington Item Type

Awarded Doctoral Thesis

Language

en_NZ

Victoria University of Wellington School

School of Biological Sciences

Advisors

Lester, Phil; Hartley, Stephen