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Bodner, F. (2011): <b>Caterpillar communities on shrubs in the montane forest zone of southern Ecuador</b> University of Vienna, <i>phd thesis</i>

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Title: Caterpillar communities on shrubs in the montane forest zone of southern Ecuador
FOR816dw ID: 1034
Publication Date: 2011-10-25
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Resource Owner(s):
Individual: Florian Bodner
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Abstract:
Caterpillar communities were studied on 16 shrub species from the family Asteraceae and the genus Piper (Piperaceae) in the Andean montane rainforest zone of southern Ecuador. The applied sampling methodology was evaluated and found well suited for sampling of caterpillars, especially with focus on resampling. During standardized sampling, a total of 18890 specimens were collected in 11 field surveys between August 2007 and June 2009. Overall, samples were dominated by gregarious early instars and egg clutches of Altinote dicaeus albofasciata (Nymphalidae) on Erato polymnioides (Asteraceae). Those and all other such groups and egg clutches were downweighted for analyses to their cubic root to balance against their overrepresentation in the data set. Trophic associations of caterpillars were confirmed by feeding trials. A substantial fraction of more than 22% of the encountered caterpillars (and up to 80% on individual shrub species) was found not to be trophically linked to the living biomass of the shrubs themselves (“non-herbivores”), but rather feed on dead leaves and epiphylls. Abundance of nonherbivores differed strongly between the two studied plant families, but was very similar on different shrub species within these families. Abundance of herbivorous caterpillars, to the contrary, differed hardly between plant families, but varied strongly between individual plant species. Herbivores were almost entirely comprised of ectophagous folivores, while florivores (2.3%) and semi-endophagous folivores (leaf rollers and tiers; 6.0%) were unexpectedly rare. Absolute species richness of herbivorous caterpillars was high, with a total of 191 Lepidoptera species on the studied 16 shrub species, but varied up to 40fold between individual plant species. Rarefied species numbers were more similar among plant species, but still showed a 15fold difference between the most species rich and most species poor community. Communities on Piper species were characterized by low effective species numbers (measured as exponential Shannon entropy) and high dominance of one or two species of the Geometridae genus Eois. E. polymnioides featured a similar structure dominated by A. dicaeus albofasciata. Communities on the other two Asteraceae (Ageratina dendroides and Baccharis latifolia), to the contrary, were found to have high effective species numbers and low dominance. In conclusion, while Piper species and E. polymnioides feature caterpillar communities defined by small, predictable sets of core herbivores, these defining sets do not exist for the other two of the studied Asteraceae species. Communities on Piper were also more specialized, with 62.8% of the caterpillar species considered monophagous at plant species level, than on Asteraceae with only 11.6% monophagous species. The observed diversity patterns point mainly to shaping by (chemical) plant-herbivore-defense, while geographic range and local abundance of host plants appear to have only limited and varying influence on the associated caterpillar communities.
Keywords:
| Lepidoptera | piper | beating tray | visual search | sampling efficiency |
Literature type specific fields:
THESIS
Degree: phd
Degree Institution: University of Vienna
Total Pages: 106
Metadata Provider:
Individual: Bernhard Runzheimer
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Online Distribution:
Download File: http://www.tropicalmountainforest.org/publications.do?citid=1034


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