Temporal distribution in a tri-trophic system associated with Piper amalago L. in a tropical seasonal forest
Autor: | Cosmo, Leandro Giacobelli, 1991, Nascimento, André Rangel, Freitas, André Victor Lucci, 1971 |
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Přispěvatelé: | UNIVERSIDADE ESTADUAL DE CAMPINAS |
Rok vydání: | 2019 |
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Zdroj: | Repositório da Produção Científica e Intelectual da Unicamp Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP) instacron:UNICAMP |
Popis: | Agradecimentos: We thank Massuo J. Kato and Martin Pareja for helping in diverse phases of the manuscript. We also thank an anonymous reviewer for the comments that substantially improved this manuscript. LGC thanks São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) for an undergraduate fellowship (2016/01380-0). ARN thanks São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) for a post-doc fellowship. AVLF acknowledges support from FAPESP (Biota-Fapesp Grants 2011/50225-3) and from the Brazilian Research Council—CNPq (fellowship 303834/2015-3). RC was founded by São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP), Grant 2013/25991-0, and CNPq (307015/2015-7). This publication is part of the RedeLep ‘Rede Nacional de Pesquisa e Conservação de Lepidópteros’ SISBIOTA-Brasil/CNPq (563332/2010-7) and of the Biota-Fapesp Program through the collaborative grant "Chemically mediated multi-trophic interaction diversity across tropical gradients" (2014/50316-7) Abstract: Insect seasonality is a known pattern that has intrigued ecologists for over 30 years. However, despite being well understood in general, for several taxa such as Lepidopteran caterpillars its underlying causes and mechanisms are still not fully understood. This is especially critical for Brazilian tropical forests where caterpillars have previously been shown to have a puzzling pattern of peaking in abundance only in the first months of the dry season; however, this pattern still lacks an explanation. Here, to advance our understanding of the factors underlying seasonal changes in caterpillar abundance in tropical forests, we addressed how the lepidopteran caterpillar community that feeds on Piper amalago L. plants, their host plants leaf numbers, the herbivory levels, and the parasitoid pressure all change throughout the dry and wet seasons in a Brazilian tropical semideciduous forest. We found that immature abundance and herbivory peak in the first 2 months of the dry season and then rapidly decrease and remain low throughout the remaining of the dry season and the entire wet season at the study site. However, although the proportion of parasitized immatures increased alongside caterpillar abundance, it peaked in the month that followed a drastic decrease in caterpillar abundance. These results suggest that parasitoids play a major role in the observed caterpillar abundance pattern and thus, we propose the hypothesis that high parasitoid predation pressure causes early eclosion and emergence of caterpillars and primarily drives caterpillar abundance seasonality in Brazilian tropical forests FUNDAÇÃO DE AMPARO À PESQUISA DO ESTADO DE SÃO PAULO - FAPESP CONSELHO NACIONAL DE DESENVOLVIMENTO CIENTÍFICO E TECNOLÓGICO - CNPQ Fechado |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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