402 results match your criteria: "Department of Multitrophic Interactions; Netherlands Institute of Ecology NIOO-KNAW; Heteren[Affiliation]"
PLoS Pathog
March 2023
Laboratory of Entomology, Wageningen University & Research, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Microorganisms living in and on macroorganisms may produce microbial volatile compounds (mVOCs) that characterise organismal odours. The mVOCs might thereby provide a reliable cue to carnivorous enemies in locating their host or prey. Parasitism by parasitoid wasps might alter the microbiome of their caterpillar host, affecting organismal odours and interactions with insects of higher trophic levels such as hyperparasitoids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlob Chang Biol
June 2023
WasserCluster Lunz-Biologische Station, Lunz am See, Austria.
Climate change-related heatwaves are major threats to biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. However, our current understanding of the mechanisms governing community resistance to and recovery from extreme temperature events is still rudimentary. The spatial insurance hypothesis postulates that diverse regional species pools can buffer ecosystem functioning against local disturbances through the immigration of better-adapted taxa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
March 2023
Department of Agricultural Sciences, University of Naples Federico II, 80055 Portici, Italy.
Plants generate energy flows through natural food webs, driven by competition for resources among organisms, which are part of a complex network of multitrophic interactions. Here, we demonstrate that the interaction between tomato plants and a phytophagous insect is driven by a hidden interplay between their respective microbiotas. Tomato plants colonized by the soil fungus , a beneficial microorganism widely used in agriculture as a biocontrol agent, negatively affects the development and survival of the lepidopteran pest by altering the larval gut microbiota and its nutritional support to the host.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Fungi (Basel)
February 2023
Department of Plant Pathology, College of Agriculture, Guizhou University, Guiyang 550025, China.
Potatoes rank third in terms of human consumption after rice and wheat. spp. are significant pests of potato crop worldwide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Ecol
December 2023
University Grenoble Alpes, University Savoie Mont Blanc, CNRS, LECA, Laboratoire d'Écologie Alpine, Grenoble, France.
Exhaustive biodiversity data, covering all the taxa in an environment, would be fundamental to understand how global changes influence organisms living at different trophic levels, and to evaluate impacts on interspecific interactions. Molecular approaches such as DNA metabarcoding are boosting our ability to perform biodiversity inventories. Nevertheless, even though a few studies have recently attempted exhaustive reconstructions of communities, holistic assessments remain rare.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
August 2023
Institute of Plant Biology and Biotechnology, University of Münster, D-48143, Münster, Germany.
Laticifers are hypothesized to mediate both plant-herbivore and plant-microbe interactions. However, there is little evidence for this dual function. We investigated whether the major constituent of natural rubber, cis-1,4-polyisoprene, a phylogenetically widespread and economically important latex polymer, alters plant resistance and the root microbiome of the Russian dandelion (Taraxacum koksaghyz) under attack of a root herbivore, the larva of the May cockchafer (Melolontha melolontha).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroorganisms
December 2022
Department of Food, Environmental and Nutritional Sciences, University of Milan, Via Celoria 2, 20133 Milan, Italy.
Flavonoids are a broad class of secondary metabolites with multifaceted functionalities for plant homeostasis and are involved in facing both biotic and abiotic stresses to sustain plant growth and health. Furthermore, they were discovered as mediators of plant networking with the surrounding environment, showing a surprising ability to perform as signaling compounds for a multitrophic inter-kingdom level of communication that influences the plant host at the phytobiome scale. Flavonoids orchestrate plant-neighboring plant allelopathic interactions, recruit beneficial bacteria and mycorrhizal fungi, counteract pathogen outbreak, influence soil microbiome and affect plant physiology to improve its resilience to fluctuating environmental conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Rev Camb Philos Soc
June 2023
Future Regions Research Centre, Federation University, University Drive, Mount Helen VIC, 3350, Australia.
Ephemeral resource patches (ERPs) - short lived resources including dung, carrion, temporary pools, rotting vegetation, decaying wood, and fungi - are found throughout every ecosystem. Their short-lived dynamics greatly enhance ecosystem heterogeneity and have shaped the evolutionary trajectories of a wide range of organisms - from bacteria to insects and amphibians. Despite this, there has been no attempt to distinguish ERPs clearly from other resource types, to identify their shared spatiotemporal characteristics, or to articulate their broad ecological and evolutionary influences on biotic communities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFiScience
December 2022
Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ), Department Computational Landscape Ecology, Leipzig, Germany.
Pathways to eradicate global hunger while bending the curve of biodiversity loss unanimously suggest changing to less energy-rich diets, closing yield gaps through agroecological principles, adopting modern breeding technologies to foster stress resilience and yields, as well as minimizing harvest losses and food waste. Against the background of a brief history of global agriculture, we review the available evidence on how the global food system might look given a global temperature increase by 3°. We show that a moderate gain in the area suitable for agriculture is confronted with substantial yield losses through strains on crop physiology, multitrophic interactions, and more frequent extreme events.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
November 2022
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, The University of Manchester, Manchester, M13 9PT, UK.
Modification of soil food webs by land management may alter the response of ecosystem processes to climate extremes, but empirical support is limited and the mechanisms involved remain unclear. Here we quantify how grassland management modifies the transfer of recent photosynthates and soil nitrogen through plants and soil food webs during a post-drought period in a controlled field experiment, using in situ C and N pulse-labelling in intensively and extensively managed fields. We show that intensive management decrease plant carbon (C) capture and its transfer through components of food webs and soil respiration compared to extensive management.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Lett
October 2022
Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology Department, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA, USA.
Microbiol Res
December 2022
Department of Biological Sciences, Alabama State University, Montgomery, AL 36104, USA.
The rhizosphere is a narrow and dynamic region of plant root-soil interfaces, and it's considered one of the most intricate and functionally active ecosystems on the Earth, which boosts plant health and alleviates the impact of biotic and abiotic stresses. Improving the key functions of the microbiome via engineering the rhizosphere microbiome is an emerging tool for improving plant growth, resilience, and soil-borne diseases. Recently, the advent of omics tools, gene-editing techniques, and sequencing technology has allowed us to unravel the entangled webs of plant-microbes interactions, enhancing plant fitness and tolerance to biotic and abiotic challenges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsects
September 2022
Department of Plant and Environmental Protection Sciences, College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources, University of Hawai'i at Mānoa, 3050 Maile Way, Gilmore Hall 513, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA.
Enemy-risk effects (i.e., non-consumptive effects) describe the non-lethal fitness costs incurred by animals when they perceive a risk of predation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Rev Entomol
January 2023
Department of Agricultural, Food, and Forest Sciences, University of Palermo, Palermo, Italy; email:
Conservation biological control aims to enhance populations of natural enemies of insect pests in crop habitats, typically by intentional provision of flowering plants as food resources. Ideally, these flowering plants should be inherently attractive to natural enemies to ensure that they are frequently visited. We review the chemical ecology of floral resources in a conservation biological control context, with a focus on insect parasitoids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Anim Ecol
February 2023
Department of Agricultural Science, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
The relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem functions (BEFs) has attracted great interest. Studies on BEF have so far focused on the average trend of ecosystem function as species diversity increases. A tantalizing but rarely addressed question is why large variations in ecosystem functions are often observed across systems with similar species diversity, likely obscuring observed BEFs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcology
April 2023
Department of Biology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA.
Plants modulate multitrophic ecological interactions, and variation in plant traits can affect these interactions. Pollinators are exposed to pathogens at flowers and acquire or transmit pathogens at different rates on different plant species, but the traits mediating those interactions are almost entirely unknown. We experimentally manipulated five plant traits that span scales including flower, inflorescence, and plant, to determine their effects on pathogen transmission between foraging bees.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Ecol Evol
September 2022
Department of Biology (DBI), Center of Biological Sciences (CCB), State University of Maringá (UEM), Maringá, Brazil.
Curr Opin Microbiol
October 2022
Department of Entomology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, United States. Electronic address:
Metarhizium spp. mediate multiple interactions that are usually positive with respect to their long-term plant environment, and negative with respect to short-lived hosts. In particular, their ability to kill a wide range of insects maximizes protection to the plants and provides a resource of nitrogen that the fungus trades with the plant for carbon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFEMS Microbiol Ecol
August 2022
Department of Microbiology, Radboud Institute for Biological and Environmental Sciences (RIBES), Radboud University, Heyendaalseweg 135, 6525 AJ, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Insects are associated with a plethora of different microbes of which we are only starting to understand their role in shaping insect-plant interactions. Besides directly benefitting from symbiotic microbial metabolism, insects obtain and transmit microbes within their environment, making them ideal vectors and potential beneficiaries of plant diseases and microbes that alter plant defenses. To prevent damage, plants elicit stress-specific defenses to ward off insects and their microbiota.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Biotheor
June 2022
Department of Aquatic Ecology, Netherlands Institute of Ecology, P.O. Box 50, 6700 AB, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Ecologists are challenged by the need to bridge and synthesize different approaches and theories to obtain a coherent understanding of ecosystems in a changing world. Both food web theory and regime shift theory shine light on mechanisms that confer stability to ecosystems, but from different angles. Empirical food web models are developed to analyze how equilibria in real multi-trophic ecosystems are shaped by species interactions, and often include linear functional response terms for simple estimation of interaction strengths from observations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Res
September 2022
Key Laboratory of Integrated Regulation and Resource Development of Shallow Lake of Ministry of Education, College of Environment, Hohai University, Nanjing, 210098, PR China.
The impoundment of reservoirs changes the river from a riverine heterotrophic system to a lacustrine autotrophic system, which could be attributed to the shift of pelagic microbial food webs in response to the dam-induced disturbances. However, little is known about what is the key factor controlling this variation and how different underlying interactions affect the food web dynamics. This study investigated the effects of flow velocity and nutrient supply on microbial plankton using a microcosm experiment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOecologia
May 2022
Laboratory of Multitrophic Interactions and Biodiversity (LIMBIO), Department of Animal Biology, Institute of Biology, University of Campinas (UNICAMP), P.O. Box 6109, Campinas, SP, 13083-970, Brazil.
Environmental heterogeneity is a key component in explaining the megadiversity of tropical forests. Despite its importance, knowledge about local drivers of environmental heterogeneity remains a challenge for ecologists. In Neotropical forests, epiphytic tank bromeliads store large amounts of water and nutrients in the tree canopy, and their tank overflow may create nutrient-rich patches in the soil.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcology
September 2022
CAS Key Laboratory for Plant Diversity and Biogeography of East Asia, Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming, China.
Biodiversity across multiple trophic levels is required to maintain multiple ecosystem functions. Yet it remains unclear how multitrophic diversity and species interactions regulate ecosystem multifunctionality. Here, combining data from 9 different trophic groups (including trees, shrubs, herbs, leaf mites, small mammals, bacteria, pathogenic fungi, saprophytic fungi, and symbiotic fungi) and 13 ecosystem functions related to supporting, provisioning, and regulating services, we used a multitrophic perspective to evaluate the effects of elevation, diversity, and network complexity on scale-dependent subalpine forest multifunctionality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcology
August 2022
Department of Biology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
The impact of multitrophic interactions on metacommunity structure, despite extensive theory and modeling/manipulative studies, has remained largely unexplored within naturally occurring metacommunities. We investigated the impacts of mutualistic partners and predators on a butterfly metacommunity, as well as the impacts that local and landscape characteristics have across three trophic levels: flowering plants, butterflies, and butterfly predators. Using data for butterfly diversity/richness, flowering plant diversity/richness, and butterfly predation (on clay butterfly models) across 15 grassland sites, we posed 3 questions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Anim Ecol
June 2022
Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Organisms exist within ecological networks, connected through interactions such as parasitism, predation and mutualism which can modify their abundance and distribution within habitat patches. Differential species responses make it hard to predict the influence of climate change at the community scale. Understanding the interplay between climate and biotic interactions can improve our predictions of how ecosystems will respond to current global warming.
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