Manak, Vita
- Department of Ecology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2016Peer reviewed
Manak, V.; Bjorklund, N.; Lenoir, L.; Knape, J.; Nordlander, G.
Non-consumptive effects are increasingly recognized as important in predator-herbivore interactions, with both fundamental and practical implications. Notably, feeding damage to conifer seedlings by pine weevils, Hylobius abietis (L.), which are serious pests in forest regeneration areas, can be decreased by interactions with ants (Formicidae). To probe the behavioural mechanisms underlying such effects, which have rarely been described in predator-herbivore systems, we investigated how the ants influence the weevils' behaviour around planted conifer seedlings in the field. Half of the seedlings were infested with aphids and attended by red wood ants Formica polyctena Forster, whereas the others were used as controls. We asked whether the ants' behaviour towards the weevils differs between these treatments, and whether the weevils' movement behaviour (locomotion, stationary activity and digging) is affected by the treatments and physical interactions with ants. The ants attacked pine weevils more frequently and for longer periods around ant-attended seedlings than around controls. Weevils' locomotion behaviour also increased markedly when attacked by ants. This may increase the likelihood of pine weevils moving away from, and causing less damage to, ant-attended seedlings. This study demonstrates how non-consumptive effects can be explained in terms of a herbivore's responses to a predator's aggressive behaviours.
ant-plant interactions; conifer seedlings; Hylobius abietis; Formica rufa group; non-consumptive effects; trait-mediated effects; predator-herbivore interactions; pine weevil
Journal of Zoology
2016, Volume: 299, number: 1, pages: 10-16 Publisher: WILEY-BLACKWELL
SLU Plant Protection Network
Behavioral Sciences Biology
Forest Science
Ecology
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/jzo.12321
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/77393