Altered rainfall patterns reduce plant fitness and disrupt interactions between below- and aboveground insect herbivores
Metadatos
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WILEY
Materia
Altered rainfall Brassicaceae Climate change Herbivory Root herbivore Semiarid environment Simulated precipitation
Fecha
2020-05-12Referencia bibliográfica
Aguirrebengoa, M., Menéndez, R., Müller, C., & González‐Megías, A. (2020). Altered rainfall patterns reduce plant fitness and disrupt interactions between below‐and aboveground insect herbivores. Ecosphere, 11(5), e03127. [ https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.3127]
Patrocinador
Spanish Government CGL2011-24840 CGL2015-71634-P BBVA-P17_ECO_0021 BES-2012-059576Resumen
Evidence is accumulating of the disruptive effects of climate change on species interactions.
However, little is known about how changes in climate patterns, such as temporal shifts in rainfall events,
will affect multitrophic interactions. Here, we investigated the effects of changes in rainfall patterns on the
interactions between root herbivores, a plant, and its associated aboveground insects in a semiarid region
by experimentally manipulating in the field rainfall intensity and frequency. We found that a shift in rainfall
severely constrained biomass acquisition and flowering of the plant Moricandia moricandioides, resulting
in fitness reduction. Importantly, enhanced rainfall affected the interactions between below- and some
aboveground herbivores, disrupting the positive effects of root herbivores on chewing insects. The shifts in
precipitation had also plant-mediated consequences for planthoppers, the dominant sapsuckers in our
study system. A combination of mechanisms involving biomass acquisition and plant defenses seemed to
be responsible for the different responses of insects and their interactions with the plant. This study provides
evidence that altered rainfall patterns due to climate change affect not only trophic groups differentially
but also their interactions.