体型对地甲虫从非作物植被中扩散具有中介作用:对保护生物控制的影响

IF 6 1区 农林科学 Q1 AGRICULTURE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment Pub Date : 2024-09-03 DOI:10.1016/j.agee.2024.109270
Tobyn Neame, Paul Galpern
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引用次数: 0

摘要

通过移除非作物植被来强化农业景观,会威胁到生态系统服务,如害虫调节。非作物区可作为天敌节肢动物的越冬栖息地,这些节肢动物会散布到邻近田地并捕食害虫。然而,要管理好这项服务,就需要进一步了解这种扩散的驱动机制以及节肢动物捕食者随后对害虫的控制。功能性状框架(即研究影响捕食者觅食行为和扩散的捕食者性状)支持在条件不同(如存在哪些节肢动物类群)的种植系统中进行推广。捕食者的体型是已知的能影响散布距离和猎物消耗量的一种特征,它是控制害虫控制的供应和有效传递的一种合理机制。我们重点研究了地甲虫(鞘翅目:甲壳虫科),这是全球农业生态系统中常见的昆虫捕食者。我们测量了在 20 块作物田中从 180 个取样站收集到的 27,815 只甲虫,以研究体型如何随着与非作物植被的距离而变化。我们将 77 只黑角翼地甲虫暴露于不同大小的模式害虫 Trichoplusia ni(鳞翅目:夜蛾科),测试了捕食者体型对觅食行为的影响。甲虫体型最小的六个十分位数随着与非作物植被距离的增加而增大,这表明更多较小的甲虫被发现在靠近田地边缘的地方,体型是介导传播距离的天敌特征。尽管我们无法拒绝无影响的零假设(α=0.05;P=0.08),但体型较大的黑色甲虫比体型较小的甲虫更倾向于捕食体型较大的猎物。这肯定了体型是影响害虫控制效果的一个合理特征,基于体型的觅食行为需要实地调查。我们的研究结果进一步呼吁在农业生态系统中建立更多、保护更好的非作物植被区,以控制各种害虫。将非作物植被斑块置于更靠近作物的地方(例如,通过恢复或缩小田地面积)是操纵作物中捕食者体型分布的一个关键杠杆,随后可能会影响不使用杀虫剂就能控制的猎物。
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Body size mediates ground beetle dispersal from non-crop vegetation: Implications for conservation biocontrol

Intensifying agricultural landscapes by removing non-crop vegetation threatens ecosystem services like pest regulation. Non-crop areas may serve as overwintering habitat for natural enemy arthropods that disperse into and predate on insect pests in the adjacent field. However, managing this service requires greater understanding of the mechanisms driving this dispersal and the subsequent control of pests by arthropod predators. A functional trait framework, i.e., studying the traits of predators that influence their foraging behaviour and dispersal, supports generalization across cropping systems where conditions differ (e.g., which arthropod taxa are present). Predator body size, a trait known to influence both dispersal distance and prey consumption, is a plausible mechanism governing the supply and the effective delivery of pest control. We focused on ground beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae), common insect predators found globally in agroecosystems. We measured 27,815 beetles collected in 20 crop fields from 180 sampling stations to examine how body size changes with distance from non-crop vegetation. We tested the effect of predator body size on foraging behaviour by exposing 77 Pterostichus melanarius ground beetles to different sizes of the model pest Trichoplusia ni (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae). The smallest six deciles of carabid body size increased in size with distance from non-crop vegetation, demonstrating that more smaller beetles are found closer to the field edge and that body size is a predator trait mediating the distance of dispersal. Larger P. melanarius show a trend towards predating larger prey than smaller prey, though we were unable to reject a null hypothesis of no effect (α=0.05; P=0.08). This affirms that body size is a plausible trait governing the effectiveness of pest control, and that size-based foraging behaviour requires in-field investigation. Our findings reinforce calls for more and better-protected non-crop vegetation areas in agroecosystems intended to control a diverse array of insect pests. Placing non-crop vegetation patches closer to crops (e.g., through restoration or reducing field size) is a critical lever for manipulating the body size distribution of predators in the crop, and subsequently may affect the prey that can be controlled without the use of pesticides.

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来源期刊
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
11.70
自引率
9.10%
发文量
392
审稿时长
26 days
期刊介绍: Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment publishes scientific articles dealing with the interface between agroecosystems and the natural environment, specifically how agriculture influences the environment and how changes in that environment impact agroecosystems. Preference is given to papers from experimental and observational research at the field, system or landscape level, from studies that enhance our understanding of processes using data-based biophysical modelling, and papers that bridge scientific disciplines and integrate knowledge. All papers should be placed in an international or wide comparative context.
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