AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study investigates how interactions between perennial wild cabbage plants and herbivores during their vegetative growth may lead to lasting effects on arthropod community composition in the following reproductive season, which can impact the plants' fitness.
  • - Researchers set up experiments to see the effects of herbivory from aphids and caterpillars on plant traits like height, leaf number, and flower number, and then measured seed production in the second year to evaluate fitness.
  • - The findings suggest that the composition of herbivore communities in the first year influences predator community composition in the second year, highlighting that these legacy effects may predict plant fitness more accurately than the immediate interactions with herbivores.

Article Abstract

In perennial plants, interactions with other community members during the vegetative growth phase may influence community assembly during subsequent reproductive years and may influence plant fitness. It is well-known that plant responses to herbivory affect community assembly within a growing season, but whether plant-herbivore interactions result in legacy effects on community assembly across seasons has received little attention. Moreover, whether plant-herbivore interactions during the vegetative growing season are important in predicting plant fitness directly or indirectly through legacy effects is poorly understood.Here, we tested whether plant-arthropod interactions in the vegetative growing season of perennial wild cabbage plants, , result in legacy effects in arthropod community assembly in the subsequent reproductive season and whether legacy effects have plant fitness consequences. We monitored the arthropod community on plants that had been induced with either aphids, caterpillars or no herbivores in a full-factorial design across 2 years. We quantified the plant traits 'height', 'number of leaves' and 'number of flowers' to understand mechanisms that may mediate legacy effects. We measured seed production in the second year to evaluate plant fitness consequences of legacy effects.Although we did not find community responses to the herbivory treatments, our data show that community composition in the first year leaves a legacy on community composition in a second year: predator community composition co-varied across years. Structural equation modelling analyses indicated that herbivore communities in the vegetative year correlated with plant performance traits that may have caused a legacy effect on especially predator community assembly in the subsequent reproductive year. Interestingly, the legacy of the herbivore community in the vegetative year predicted plant fitness better than the herbivore community that directly interacted with plants in the reproductive year. Thus, legacy effects of plant-herbivore interactions affect community assembly on perennial plants across growth seasons and these processes may affect plant reproductive success. We argue that plant-herbivore interactions in the vegetative phase as well as in the cross-seasonal legacy effects caused by plant responses to arthropod herbivory may be important in perennial plant trait evolution such as ontogenetic variation in growth and defence strategies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6774310PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.13231DOI Listing

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