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Her Majesty's Desert Throne: The Ecology of Queen Butterfly Oviposition on Mojave Milkweed Host Plants. | LitMetric

Her Majesty's Desert Throne: The Ecology of Queen Butterfly Oviposition on Mojave Milkweed Host Plants.

Insects

Wild Energy Initiative, John Muir Institute of the Environment, University of California, Davis, 1 Shields Ave., Davis, CA 95616, USA.

Published: April 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Butterfly-host plant relationships enhance our knowledge of ecosystem functions and interactions.
  • Research focused on monarch and queen butterflies’ oviposition behaviors in the Mojave Desert aimed to understand how plant traits and availability influence these relationships.
  • The study found queen butterfly eggs significantly increase on larger, mature Mojave milkweed plants in early spring, highlighting the need for concurrent conservation strategies for both the milkweed and the butterflies.

Article Abstract

Butterfly-host plant relationships can inform our understanding of ecological and trophic interactions that contribute to ecosystem function, resiliency, and services. The ecology of danaid-milkweed (Apocynaceae) host plant interactions has been studied in several biomes but is neglected in deserts. Our objective was to determine effects of plant traits, seasonality, and landscape-level host plant availability on selection of Mojave milkweed ( A. Gray) by ovipositing monarch butterflies ( ) and queen butterflies () in the Californian Mojave Desert. We surveyed all known Mojave milkweed locations in the Ivanpah Valley, California ( = 419) during early, mid-, and late spring in 2017. For each survey, we counted monarch and queen butterfly eggs on each Mojave milkweed plant. We also measured canopy cover, height, volume, and reproductive stage of each Mojave milkweed plant. We counted a total of 276 queen butterfly eggs and zero monarch butterfly eggs on Mojave milkweed host plants. We determined that count of queen butterfly eggs significantly increased with increasing Mojave milkweed canopy cover. Additionally, count of queen butterfly eggs was: (1) greater on adult Mojave milkweed plants than on juvenile and seedling plants and greater on juvenile Mojave milkweed plants than on seedling plants; and (2) greater during early spring than mid-spring-we recorded no eggs during late spring. Based on aggregation indices, queen butterfly eggs occurred on Mojave milkweed plants in a nonrandom, clustered pattern throughout the Ivanpah Valley. We provide the first evidence of trophic interactions between queen butterflies and Mojave milkweed at multiple spatial scales in the Mojave Desert, suggesting that conservation and management practices for both species should be implemented concurrently. Given its role as an herbivore, pollinator and prey, the queen butterfly may serve as a model organism for understanding effects of anthropogenic disturbance (e.g., solar energy development) on "bottom-up" and trophic interactions among soils, plants and animals in desert ecosystems.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7240705PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects11040257DOI Listing

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