Eur. J. Entomol. 109 (1): 55-69, 2012 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2012.008
Temporal partitioning in an assemblage of insect defoliators feeding on oak on a Mediterranean mountain
- 1 National Agricultural Research Foundation, Forest Research Inst., 57006 Vassilika, Thessaloniki, Greece
- 2 National Agricultural Research Foundation, Institute for Mediterranean Forest Ecosystem Research, Laboratory of Entomology, Terma Alkmanos, 11528 Ilissia, Athens, Greece
Insects feeding on the foliage of oak were studied on a mountain where species of Mediterranean deciduous and evergreen oak coexist. There were 58 insect species (54 Lepidoptera, 1 Coleopteran and 3 Hymenoptera) belonging to twenty families in the assemblage feeding on eight species of Quercus, two of which are introduced from nearby regions. The overlap in occurrence in time and of feeding niches of the insects feeding on the foliage of the different species of oak was determined using the: (a) Poole-Rathcke method, which tests phenological overlap and (b) Petraitis method, which tests niche overlap. This indicated that insect families partition seasonal time in a random and the entire assemblage in a regular way. All groups of insects partitioned season randomly except for the pairs of monophagous-oligophagous and Palearctic-Eurosiberian species, which partition season regularly. Oak folivorous insects correctly perceive the three subgenera of oaks with the exception of the planted Q. robur pedunculiflora. The folivorous insects recorded on the Mediterranean evergreen oaks (subgenus Sclerophyllodrys) differ from those on the other two subgenera (Quercus and Cerris) and co-occurring deciduous trees. The hypothesis of complete general overlap is rejected for groups based on feeding specialization, zoogeographical categories and taxonomic families. The same was the case when the entire insect assemblage was considered. The percentage of specific niche overlap of the folivorous insects is low and greatest among the monophagous species (13.8%) and those with a Mediterranean distribution (15.4%). Voltinism is not very important for this assemblage and only seven species are bivoltine of which four fed on a different species of oak in the second generation. The overall conclusion is that the co-occurrence in space of these species is possible because they occur regularly at different times during the season whereas that of insect groups based on zoogeographical, taxonomic or feeding specialization are randomly dispersed in time.
Keywords: Quercus, Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, Hymenoptera, oak defoliators, phenology, species coexistence, niche overlap, zoogeographical categories, feeding specialization, Mt Holomontas Chalkidiki Greece
Accepted: September 1, 2011; Published: January 3, 2012 Show citation
References
- ABER J.D. 1979: A method for estimating foliage-height profiles in broad-leaved forests. J. Ecol. 67: 35-40
Go to original source... - ALONSO C. & HERRERA C.M. 2000: Seasonal variation in leaf characteristics and food selection by larval noctuids on an evergreen Mediterranean shrub. Acta Oecol. 21: 257-265
Go to original source... - ALTERMATT F. 2010: Tell me what you eat and I'll tell you when you fly: diet can predict phenological changes in response to climate change. Ecol. Lett. 13: 1475-1484
Go to original source... - BOLZ R. 2008: Diversity of moth communities (Insecta: Lepidoptera) in differently-structured oak-hornbeam forests: a comparison of different phases of succession in coppice with standards and forests with high standared trees. In Floren A. & Schmidl J. (eds): Canopy Arthropod Research in Europe: Basic and Applied Studies from the High Frontier. Bioform Entomology, Nuernberg, pp. 427-443
- BORATYNSKI A., BROWICZ K. & SIELINSKI J. 1992: Chorology of Trees and Shrubs in Greece. Polish Academy of Sciences, Poznan / Kornik, 286 pp
- CHANG F., CAREY V., QIU W., ZAMAR R.H., LAZARUS R. & WANG X. 2010: clues: An R Package for Nonparametric Clustering Based on Local Shrinking. http://cran.at.r-project.org /web/packages/clues/ accessed 25.xii.2010
- CIZEK L., FRIC Z. & KONVICKA M. 2006: Host plant defences and voltinism in European butterflies. Ecol. Entomol. 31: 337-344
Go to original source... - COLEY P.D., BRYANT J.P. & CHAPIN F.S. III. 1985: Resource Availability and plant anti-herbivore defense. Science 230: 895-899
Go to original source... - CORNELL H.V. 1985: Local and regional richness of Cynipine gall wasps on California oaks. Ecology 66: 1247-1260
Go to original source... - CSOKA G. 1998: Oak defoliating insects in Hungary. In McManus M.L. & Liebhold A.M. (eds): Proceedings: Population Dynamics, Impacts, and Integrated Management of Forest Defoliating Insects. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report NE-247, pp. 334-355
- DAMESIN C., RAMBAL S. & JOFFRE R. 1998: Seasonal and annual changes in leaf G13C in two co-occurring Mediterranean oaks: relations to leaf growth and drought progression. Funct. Ecol. 12: 778-785
Go to original source... - DENNO R.F., MCCLURE M.S. & OTT J.R. 1995: Interspecific interactions in phytophagous insects: Competition reexamined and resurrected. Annu. Rev. Entomol. 40: 297-331
Go to original source... - EDMUNDS G.F. & ALSTAD D.N. 1978: Coevolution in insect herbivores and conifers. Science 199: 941-945
Go to original source... - FATTORINI S. 2005: A simple method to fit geometric series and broken stick models in community ecology and island biogeography. Acta Oecol. 28: 199-205
Go to original source... - FEENY P. 1970: Seasonal changes in oak leaf tannins and nutrients as a cause of spring feeding by winter moth caterpillars. Ecology 51: 565-581
Go to original source... - FUHRER E. 1998: Oak decline in central Europe: a synopsis of hypotheses. In McManus M.L. & Liebhlold A.M. (eds): Proceedings: Population Dynamics, Impacts, and Integrated Management of Forest Defoliating Insects. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report NE-247, pp. 7-24
- GAUS R. 1982: Familienreihe Cynipoidea. In Schwenke W. (ed.): Die Forstschaendlinge Europas, Vol. 4. Paul Parey Verlag, Hamburg, pp. 234-255
- GILLER P.S. 1984: Community Structure and the Niche. Chapman and Hall, London, 176 pp
Go to original source... - GRIPENBERG S., MORRIEN E., CUDMORE A., SALMINEN J.-P. & ROSLIN T. 2007: Resource selection by female moths in a heterogeneous environment: what is a poor girl to do? J. Anim. Ecol. 76: 854-865
Go to original source... - HACKER H. & MULLER J. 2008: Startification of "macro-Lepidoptera" (Insecta) in northern Bavarian forest stands dominated by different tree species. In Floren A. & Schmidl J (eds): Canopy Arthropd Research in Europe: Basic and Applied Studies from the High Frontier. Bioform, Nuernberg, pp. 355-382
- HAMMER O. & HARPER D. 2006: Introduction to Paleontological Data Analysis. Blackwell, Oxford, 351 pp
Go to original source... - HARRIS J.W.E., COLLIS D.G. & MAGAR K.M. 1972: Evaluation of the tree-beating method for sampling defoliating forest insects. Can. Entomol. 104: 723-729
Go to original source... - JOLIVET P. 1998: Interrelationships between Insects and Plants. CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, 336 pp
Go to original source... - JOSIFOV M. 1986: Verzeichnis der von den Balkanhalbilsen bekannten Heteropterenarten. Faun. Abh. Mus. Tierk. (Dresden) 14: 61-93
- KAILIDIS D.S. 1986: Forest Entomology. Giapouli-Giahoudi, Thessaloniki, 397 pp. [in Greek]
- KARBAN R. 1985: Addition of periodical cicada nymphs to an oak forest: effects on cicada density, acorn production and rootlet density. J. Kans. Entomol. Soc. 58: 269-276
- KULFAN M., SEPTAK L. & DEGMA P. 1997: Lepidoptera larvae communities on oaks in SW Slovakia. Biologia (Bratislava) 52: 247-252
- KULFAN M., HOLECOVA M. & FALCIK J. 2006: Caterpillar (Lepidoptera) communities on European Turkey oak (Quercus cerris) in Male Karpaty Mts (SW Slovakia). Biologia (Bratislava) 61: 573-578
Go to original source... - LOREAU M. 1992: Time scale of resource dynamics and coexistence through time partitioning. Theor. Popul. Biol. 41: 401-412
Go to original source... - MAAREL VAN DER E. 1979: Transformation of cover abundance values in phytosociology and its effects on community similarity. Vegetatio 39: 97-114
Go to original source... - MARQUIS R.J. & PHELAN C.J. 1994: Insectivorous birds increase growth of white oak through consumption of leaf-chewing insects. Ecology 75: 2007-2014
Go to original source... - MCCUNE B., GRACE J.B. & URBAN D.L. 2002: Analysis of Ecological Communities. MjM, Gleneden Beach, OR, 300 pp
- MOPPER S. 2005: Phenology - how time creates spatial structure in endophagous insect populations. Ann. Zool. Fenn. 42: 327-333
- NE'EMAN G. 1993: Variations in leaf phenology and habit in Querqus ithaburensis, a Mediterranean deciduous tree. J. Ecol. 81: 627-634
Go to original source... - NIEMELA P. & HAUKIOJA E. 1982: Seasonal patterns in species richness of herbivores: macrolepidopteran larvae on Finnish deciduous trees. Ecol. Entomol. 7: 169-175
Go to original source... - NYLIN S., NYGREN G.H., SOEDERLIND L. & STEFANESCU C. 2009: Geographical variation in host plant utilization in the comma butterfly: the roles of time constraints and plant phenology. Evol. Ecol. 23: 807-825
Go to original source... - OKSANEN J., KINDT R., LEGENDRE P., O'HARA R.B., SIMPSON G.L., STEVENS M.H.H. & WAGNER H. 2008: vegan: Community Ecology Package. R Package Version 1.13-2. http://vegan. r-forge.r-project.org/ accessed 17.v.2008
- ORLOCI L. 1979: Non-linear data structures and their description. In Orloci L., Rao C.R. & Stiteler W.M. (eds): Multivariate Methods in Ecological Work. ICPH, Burtonsville, MD, pp. 191-202
- OZANNE C.M.P. 2005: Techniques and methods for sampling canopy insects. In Leather S. (ed.): Insect Sampling in Forest Ecosystems. Blackwell, Oxford, pp. 146-167
Go to original source... - PATOCKA J. 1980: Die Raupen und Puppen der Eichenschmetterlinge Mitteleuropas. Paul Parey Verlag, Germany, 188 pp
- PETRAITIS P.S. 1979: Likelihood measures of niche breadth and overlap. Ecology 66: 1983-1985
Go to original source... - PETRAITIS P.S. 1985: The relationship between likelihood niche measures and replicated tests for goodness of fit. Ecology 66: 1983-1985
Go to original source... - POOLE R.W. & RATHCKE B.J. 1979: Regularity, randomness and aggregation in flowering phonologies. Science 203: 470-471
Go to original source... - R DEVELOPMENT CORE TEAM 2010: R: A language and Environment for Statistical Computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna
- RABINOWITZ D., RAPP J.K., SORK V.L., RATHCKE B.J., REESE G.A. & WEAVER J.C. 1981: Phenological properties of wind- and insect pollinated prairie plants. Ecology 62: 49-56
Go to original source... - RATHCKE B.J. 1984: Patterns of flowering phenologies: Testability and causal inference using a random model. In Strong D.R., Simberloff D., Abele L.G. &. Thistle A.B. (eds): Ecological Communities: Conceptual Issues and the Evidence. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, pp. 383-393
Go to original source... - ROSLIN T., GRIPENBERG S., SALMINEN J.-P., KARONEN M., O'HARA R.B., PIHLAJA K. & PULKKINEN P. 2006: Seeing the trees for the leaves / oaks as mosaics for a host-specific moth. Oikos 113: 106-120
Go to original source... - SCHOENER T.W. 1974a: Resource partitioning in ecological communities. Science 185: 27-39
Go to original source... - SCHOENER T.W. 1974b: The compression hypothesis and temporal resource partitioning. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. 71: 4169-4172
Go to original source... - SCHOENER T.W. 1986: Resource partitioning. In Kikkawa J. & Anderson D.J. (eds): Community Ecology: Pattern and Process. Blackwell, London, pp. 91-126
- SCHWENKE W. (ed.) 1978: Die Forstschaedlinge Europas: Schmetterlinge Vol. 3. Paul Parey Verlag, Hamburg, 467 pp
- SIMCHUK A.P. 2008: Influence of genetic variation of oak trees as a nutrient substrate adaption of the pea green oak leafroller. Cytol. Genet. 42: 45-52
Go to original source... - SOUTHWOOD T.R.E. & KENNEDY C.E.J. 1983: Trees as islands. Oikos 41: 359-371
Go to original source... - SOUTHWOOD T.R.E., WINT G.R.W., KENNEDY C.E.J. & GREENWOOD S.R. 2004: Seasonality, abundance, species richness and specificity of the phytophagous guild of insects on oak (Quercus) canopies. Eur. J. Entomol. 101: 43-50
Go to original source... - SOUTHWOOD T.R.E., WINT G.R.W., KENNEDY C.E.J. & GREENWOOD S.R. 2005: The composition of the arthropod fauna of the canopies of some species of oak (Quercus). Eur. J. Entomol. 102: 65-72
Go to original source... - TACK A.J.M., OVASKAINEN O., PULKKINEN P. & ROSLIN T. 2010: Spatial location dominates over host plant genotype in structuring an herbivore community. Ecology 91: 2660-2672
Go to original source... - TIKKANEN O.-P. & JULKUNEN-TIITTO R. 2003: Phenological variation as protection against defoliating insects: the case of Quercus robur and Operophthera brumata. Oecologia 136: 244-251
Go to original source... - TOPP W. & KIRSTEN K. 1991: Synchronisation of preimaginal development and reproductive success in the winter moth, Operophthera brumata L. J. Appl. Entomol. 111: 137-146
Go to original source... - TOVAR-SANCHEZ E. & OYAMA K. 2006: Community structure of canopy arthropods associated to Quercus crassifolia X Quercus crassipes complex. Oikos 112: 370-381
Go to original source... - VAN ASCH M. & VISSER M.E. 2007: Phenology of forest caterpillars and their host trees: the importance of synchrony. Annu. Rev. Entomol. 52: 37-55
Go to original source... - WILKINSON L. 2007: SYSTAT 12. Systat Software Inc., Evanston, IL
- YELA J.L. & HERRERA C.M. 1993: Seasonality and life cycles of woody plant-feeding noctuid moths (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) in Mediterranean habitats. Ecol. Entomol. 18: 259-269
Go to original source... - ANONYMOUS 1992: Results of the First National Forest Inventory. Hellenic Ministry of Agriculture, Athens, 134 pp
- DONEVSKI C. 1984: Entomofauna (Lepidoptera) of oak (Quercus coccifera) in SR Macedonia. Fragm. Balcan. Mus. Macedon. Sci. Natur. 12: 63-70
- ESCHERICH K. 1931: Die Forstinsekten Mitteleuropas. Paul Parey, Berlin, 825 pp
- IVASHOF A.V. & SUSLOVA G.N. 1990: The overwindering population of Trichogramma telengai, an egg parasite of the oak roller Tortrix viridana in the oak forests of the Crimea. Izvest. Vyssh. Uchebn. Zaved. (Lesnoy Zh.) 5: 9-13
- KAILIDIS D.S. 1981: The Insects of Oak in Greece. Scientific Annals 24, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, pp. 129-139
- KAILIDIS D.S. & GEORGEVITS R. 1974: The Forest Insects of Greece. Scientific Annals 16, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, School of Agriculture and Forestry, pp. 233-271
- KUHNT P. 1911: Illustriete Bestimmungs-Tabellen der Kaefer Deutschlands. E. Schweizerbart'sche Verlag, Stuttgart, 1138 pp
- LERAUT P. 2006: Moths of Europe. NAP Editions, France, 396 pp
- MEYRICK E. 1968: A Revised Handbook of British Lepidoptera. E.W. Classey, Hampton, 915 pp
- PATOCKA J. 1980: Raupen und Puppen der Eichenshmetterlinge Mitteleuropas. Paul Parey, Hamburg, Berlin, 188 pp
- SCHOEROGGE K. 1991: Zur biologie der Eichenblattwespen Caliroa cinxia Klug. und Caliroa annulipes Klug. (Hymenoptera, Tenthredinidae) und deren Larvalparasitoiden. J. Appl. Emtomol. 111: 365-379
Go to original source... - SWARSCHEK B. 1958: Die Larvalsystematik der Wickler (Tortricidae und Carposidae). Academie Verlag, Berlin, 269 pp
- ZLATANOV S. 1971: Insektenschaedlinge der Eiche in Bulgarien. Akademie der Landwirtschaftswissenschaften in Bulgarien, Sofia, 212 pp
- MARCHINKO K.B., NISHIZAKI M.T. & BURNS K.C. 2004: Community-wide character displacement in barnacles: a new perspective for past observations. Ecol. Lett. 7: 114-120
Go to original source... - PAVON N.P. & BRIONES O. 2001: Phenological patterns of nine perennial plants in an intertropical semi-arid Mexican scrub. J. Arid Environ. 49: 265-277
Go to original source... - SANDERS N.J., GOTELLI N.J., WITTMAN S.E., RATCHFORD J.S., ELLISON A.M. & JULES E.S. 2007: Assembly rules of ground-foraging ant assemblages are contingent on disturbance, habitat and spatial scale. J. Biogeogr. 34: 1632-1641
Go to original source...
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original publication is properly cited. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.




