Differential effects of climate warming on reproduction and functional responses on insects in the fourth trophic level

Understanding the effects of anthropogenic global warming (AGW) on species interactions is essential for predicting community responses to climate change. However, while effects of AGW on resource–consumer interactions at the first and second trophic level have been well studied, little is known about effects on interactions at higher trophic levels at the terminal end of food chains (e.g. in the third and fourth trophic levels). Here, we examined the effects of temperature variability by simulating heatwaves on functional responses of two species at the fourth trophic level (hyperparasitoids) that parasitize host species at the third trophic level (parasitoid cocoons). We found that host cocoons developed faster under simulated heatwave conditions, decreasing the temporal window of susceptibility of the host cocoons to parasitism by the two hyperparasitoids, and consequently parasitism declined with temperature. However, the effects of a simulated heatwave markedly differed among the two hyperparasitoid species; temperature and host quality had a much stronger effect on early reproduction in the less fecund hyperparasitoid Gelis agilis, than in the more fecund species Acrolyta nens. Our results suggest that exposure to heatwaves, that are expected to increase in frequency, will affect the ability of species at higher trophic levels to exploit transient resources whose suitability is temperature-dependent. In turn, the observed effects of AGW on the functional responses of the hyperparasitoids may disrupt trophic interactions and have profound impact on population dynamics and ecological processes. A plain language summary is available for this article.

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Main Authors: Chen, Cong, Gols, Rieta, Biere, Arjen, Harvey, Jeffrey A.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:anthropogenic global warming, functional responses, host, hyperparasitoids, parasitoid interactions, parasitoids, reproduction,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/differential-effects-of-climate-warming-on-reproduction-and-funct
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5472702024-09-23 Chen, Cong Gols, Rieta Biere, Arjen Harvey, Jeffrey A. Article/Letter to editor Functional Ecology 33 (2019) 4 ISSN: 0269-8463 Differential effects of climate warming on reproduction and functional responses on insects in the fourth trophic level 2019 Understanding the effects of anthropogenic global warming (AGW) on species interactions is essential for predicting community responses to climate change. However, while effects of AGW on resource–consumer interactions at the first and second trophic level have been well studied, little is known about effects on interactions at higher trophic levels at the terminal end of food chains (e.g. in the third and fourth trophic levels). Here, we examined the effects of temperature variability by simulating heatwaves on functional responses of two species at the fourth trophic level (hyperparasitoids) that parasitize host species at the third trophic level (parasitoid cocoons). We found that host cocoons developed faster under simulated heatwave conditions, decreasing the temporal window of susceptibility of the host cocoons to parasitism by the two hyperparasitoids, and consequently parasitism declined with temperature. However, the effects of a simulated heatwave markedly differed among the two hyperparasitoid species; temperature and host quality had a much stronger effect on early reproduction in the less fecund hyperparasitoid Gelis agilis, than in the more fecund species Acrolyta nens. Our results suggest that exposure to heatwaves, that are expected to increase in frequency, will affect the ability of species at higher trophic levels to exploit transient resources whose suitability is temperature-dependent. In turn, the observed effects of AGW on the functional responses of the hyperparasitoids may disrupt trophic interactions and have profound impact on population dynamics and ecological processes. A plain language summary is available for this article. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/differential-effects-of-climate-warming-on-reproduction-and-funct 10.1111/1365-2435.13277 https://edepot.wur.nl/469997 anthropogenic global warming functional responses host hyperparasitoids parasitoid interactions parasitoids reproduction https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic anthropogenic global warming
functional responses
host
hyperparasitoids
parasitoid interactions
parasitoids
reproduction
anthropogenic global warming
functional responses
host
hyperparasitoids
parasitoid interactions
parasitoids
reproduction
spellingShingle anthropogenic global warming
functional responses
host
hyperparasitoids
parasitoid interactions
parasitoids
reproduction
anthropogenic global warming
functional responses
host
hyperparasitoids
parasitoid interactions
parasitoids
reproduction
Chen, Cong
Gols, Rieta
Biere, Arjen
Harvey, Jeffrey A.
Differential effects of climate warming on reproduction and functional responses on insects in the fourth trophic level
description Understanding the effects of anthropogenic global warming (AGW) on species interactions is essential for predicting community responses to climate change. However, while effects of AGW on resource–consumer interactions at the first and second trophic level have been well studied, little is known about effects on interactions at higher trophic levels at the terminal end of food chains (e.g. in the third and fourth trophic levels). Here, we examined the effects of temperature variability by simulating heatwaves on functional responses of two species at the fourth trophic level (hyperparasitoids) that parasitize host species at the third trophic level (parasitoid cocoons). We found that host cocoons developed faster under simulated heatwave conditions, decreasing the temporal window of susceptibility of the host cocoons to parasitism by the two hyperparasitoids, and consequently parasitism declined with temperature. However, the effects of a simulated heatwave markedly differed among the two hyperparasitoid species; temperature and host quality had a much stronger effect on early reproduction in the less fecund hyperparasitoid Gelis agilis, than in the more fecund species Acrolyta nens. Our results suggest that exposure to heatwaves, that are expected to increase in frequency, will affect the ability of species at higher trophic levels to exploit transient resources whose suitability is temperature-dependent. In turn, the observed effects of AGW on the functional responses of the hyperparasitoids may disrupt trophic interactions and have profound impact on population dynamics and ecological processes. A plain language summary is available for this article.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet anthropogenic global warming
functional responses
host
hyperparasitoids
parasitoid interactions
parasitoids
reproduction
author Chen, Cong
Gols, Rieta
Biere, Arjen
Harvey, Jeffrey A.
author_facet Chen, Cong
Gols, Rieta
Biere, Arjen
Harvey, Jeffrey A.
author_sort Chen, Cong
title Differential effects of climate warming on reproduction and functional responses on insects in the fourth trophic level
title_short Differential effects of climate warming on reproduction and functional responses on insects in the fourth trophic level
title_full Differential effects of climate warming on reproduction and functional responses on insects in the fourth trophic level
title_fullStr Differential effects of climate warming on reproduction and functional responses on insects in the fourth trophic level
title_full_unstemmed Differential effects of climate warming on reproduction and functional responses on insects in the fourth trophic level
title_sort differential effects of climate warming on reproduction and functional responses on insects in the fourth trophic level
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/differential-effects-of-climate-warming-on-reproduction-and-funct
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AT bierearjen differentialeffectsofclimatewarmingonreproductionandfunctionalresponsesoninsectsinthefourthtrophiclevel
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