Diversity of insects associated with two common plants in the Brazilian Cerrado: Responses of two guilds of herbivores to bottom-up and top-down forces

The Trophic Cascade Theory has been used to explain the organization of herbivorous insect communities in tropical ecosystems. In addition, the insect community associated with a species of plant can also be determined by the geographical distribution and taxonomic isolation of the plant. In this st...

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Main Authors: Juliana KUCHENBECKER, Marcílio FAGUNDES
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute of Entomology, Biology Centre, Czech Academy of Science 2018-07-01
Series:European Journal of Entomology
Subjects:
ant
Online Access:https://www.eje.cz/artkey/eje-201801-0035_Diversity_of_insects_associated_with_two_common_plants_in_the_Brazilian_Cerrado_Responses_of_two_guilds_of_her.php
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spelling doaj-08f1d37dc9a441af840f922c0e19cc5e2021-04-16T20:35:58ZengInstitute of Entomology, Biology Centre, Czech Academy of ScienceEuropean Journal of Entomology1210-57591802-88292018-07-01115135436310.14411/eje.2018.035eje-201801-0035Diversity of insects associated with two common plants in the Brazilian Cerrado: Responses of two guilds of herbivores to bottom-up and top-down forcesJuliana KUCHENBECKER0Marcílio FAGUNDES1Laboratório de Ecologia de Insetos, DBG/ICB/Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, 30161-970, Brasil; e-mails: jubelisario@gmail.com, marcilio.fagundes@gmail.comLaboratório de Biologia da Conservação, DBG/CCBS/Universidade Estadual de Montes Claros, Montes Claros, Minas Gerais, 39401-089, BrasilThe Trophic Cascade Theory has been used to explain the organization of herbivorous insect communities in tropical ecosystems. In addition, the insect community associated with a species of plant can also be determined by the geographical distribution and taxonomic isolation of the plant. In this study, the following predictions about the number of herbivores associated with particular host plants were tested: (i) plant species belonging to large taxonomic groups with broad geographical distributions have a higher number, (ii) the abundance of ants negatively affects herbivore insect diversity, (iii) local plant diversity positively affects chewing herbivore diversity and (iv) local abundance of a specific host plant positively affects the diversity of sucking herbivores. The samples of insect herbivores were collected from 32 plants (16 plants of Erythroxylum suberosum and 16 of Qualea parviflora) by beating. A total of 71 ants (13 species) and 158 herbivorous insects (90 species) were collected from these two species of plants. The richness and abundance of the insect herbivores collected from E. suberosum differed from those collected from Q. parviflora. The abundance of ants negatively affected the diversity of sucking insects associated with E. suberosum. In addition, the interaction between the variables total plant richness per plot and ant abundance affected the diversity of chewing insects associated with E. suberosum. The density of Q. parviflora per plot affected the diversity of associated sucking insects. In addition, the interaction of the variables abundance of ants and abundance of Q. parviflora influenced the diversity of chewing insects. Our results indicate that there is no predominance of bottom-up or top-down forces in the organization of herbivorous insect communities in this area of tropical savanna, but the roles of these forces on insect communities are guild-dependent.https://www.eje.cz/artkey/eje-201801-0035_Diversity_of_insects_associated_with_two_common_plants_in_the_Brazilian_Cerrado_Responses_of_two_guilds_of_her.phpantβ diversityherbivorecommunity organizationinsect guildstrophic cascadevegetation heterogeneity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juliana KUCHENBECKER
Marcílio FAGUNDES
spellingShingle Juliana KUCHENBECKER
Marcílio FAGUNDES
Diversity of insects associated with two common plants in the Brazilian Cerrado: Responses of two guilds of herbivores to bottom-up and top-down forces
European Journal of Entomology
ant
β diversity
herbivore
community organization
insect guilds
trophic cascade
vegetation heterogeneity
author_facet Juliana KUCHENBECKER
Marcílio FAGUNDES
author_sort Juliana KUCHENBECKER
title Diversity of insects associated with two common plants in the Brazilian Cerrado: Responses of two guilds of herbivores to bottom-up and top-down forces
title_short Diversity of insects associated with two common plants in the Brazilian Cerrado: Responses of two guilds of herbivores to bottom-up and top-down forces
title_full Diversity of insects associated with two common plants in the Brazilian Cerrado: Responses of two guilds of herbivores to bottom-up and top-down forces
title_fullStr Diversity of insects associated with two common plants in the Brazilian Cerrado: Responses of two guilds of herbivores to bottom-up and top-down forces
title_full_unstemmed Diversity of insects associated with two common plants in the Brazilian Cerrado: Responses of two guilds of herbivores to bottom-up and top-down forces
title_sort diversity of insects associated with two common plants in the brazilian cerrado: responses of two guilds of herbivores to bottom-up and top-down forces
publisher Institute of Entomology, Biology Centre, Czech Academy of Science
series European Journal of Entomology
issn 1210-5759
1802-8829
publishDate 2018-07-01
description The Trophic Cascade Theory has been used to explain the organization of herbivorous insect communities in tropical ecosystems. In addition, the insect community associated with a species of plant can also be determined by the geographical distribution and taxonomic isolation of the plant. In this study, the following predictions about the number of herbivores associated with particular host plants were tested: (i) plant species belonging to large taxonomic groups with broad geographical distributions have a higher number, (ii) the abundance of ants negatively affects herbivore insect diversity, (iii) local plant diversity positively affects chewing herbivore diversity and (iv) local abundance of a specific host plant positively affects the diversity of sucking herbivores. The samples of insect herbivores were collected from 32 plants (16 plants of Erythroxylum suberosum and 16 of Qualea parviflora) by beating. A total of 71 ants (13 species) and 158 herbivorous insects (90 species) were collected from these two species of plants. The richness and abundance of the insect herbivores collected from E. suberosum differed from those collected from Q. parviflora. The abundance of ants negatively affected the diversity of sucking insects associated with E. suberosum. In addition, the interaction between the variables total plant richness per plot and ant abundance affected the diversity of chewing insects associated with E. suberosum. The density of Q. parviflora per plot affected the diversity of associated sucking insects. In addition, the interaction of the variables abundance of ants and abundance of Q. parviflora influenced the diversity of chewing insects. Our results indicate that there is no predominance of bottom-up or top-down forces in the organization of herbivorous insect communities in this area of tropical savanna, but the roles of these forces on insect communities are guild-dependent.
topic ant
β diversity
herbivore
community organization
insect guilds
trophic cascade
vegetation heterogeneity
url https://www.eje.cz/artkey/eje-201801-0035_Diversity_of_insects_associated_with_two_common_plants_in_the_Brazilian_Cerrado_Responses_of_two_guilds_of_her.php
work_keys_str_mv AT julianakuchenbecker diversityofinsectsassociatedwithtwocommonplantsinthebraziliancerradoresponsesoftwoguildsofherbivorestobottomupandtopdownforces
AT marciliofagundes diversityofinsectsassociatedwithtwocommonplantsinthebraziliancerradoresponsesoftwoguildsofherbivorestobottomupandtopdownforces
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