Indirect interactions in the High Arctic.

Indirect interactions as mediated by higher and lower trophic levels have been advanced as key forces structuring herbivorous arthropod communities around the globe. Here, we present a first quantification of the interaction structure of a herbivore-centered food web from the High Arctic. Targeting...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tomas Roslin, Helena Wirta, Tapani Hopkins, Bess Hardwick, Gergely Várkonyi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3691180?pdf=render
_version_ 1818475431569915904
author Tomas Roslin
Helena Wirta
Tapani Hopkins
Bess Hardwick
Gergely Várkonyi
author_facet Tomas Roslin
Helena Wirta
Tapani Hopkins
Bess Hardwick
Gergely Várkonyi
author_sort Tomas Roslin
collection DOAJ
description Indirect interactions as mediated by higher and lower trophic levels have been advanced as key forces structuring herbivorous arthropod communities around the globe. Here, we present a first quantification of the interaction structure of a herbivore-centered food web from the High Arctic. Targeting the Lepidoptera of Northeast Greenland, we introduce generalized overlap indices as a novel tool for comparing different types of indirect interactions. First, we quantify the scope for top-down-up interactions as the probability that a herbivore attacking plant species i itself fed as a larva on species j. Second, we gauge this herbivore overlap against the potential for bottom-up-down interactions, quantified as the probability that a parasitoid attacking herbivore species i itself developed as a larva on species j. Third, we assess the impact of interactions with other food web modules, by extending the core web around the key herbivore Sympistis nigrita to other predator guilds (birds and spiders). We find the host specificity of both herbivores and parasitoids to be variable, with broad generalists occurring in both trophic layers. Indirect links through shared resources and through shared natural enemies both emerge as forces with a potential for shaping the herbivore community. The structure of the host-parasitoid submodule of the food web suggests scope for classic apparent competition. Yet, based on predation experiments, we estimate that birds kill as many (8%) larvae of S. nigrita as do parasitoids (8%), and that spiders kill many more (38%). Interactions between these predator guilds may result in further complexities. Our results caution against broad generalizations from studies of limited food web modules, and show the potential for interactions within and between guilds of extended webs. They also add a data point from the northernmost insect communities on Earth, and describe the baseline structure of a food web facing imminent climate change.
first_indexed 2024-12-10T09:12:29Z
format Article
id doaj.art-57ed23bc8abc412c89682bd37962ceaf
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-10T09:12:29Z
publishDate 2013-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-57ed23bc8abc412c89682bd37962ceaf2022-12-22T01:54:58ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0186e6736710.1371/journal.pone.0067367Indirect interactions in the High Arctic.Tomas RoslinHelena WirtaTapani HopkinsBess HardwickGergely VárkonyiIndirect interactions as mediated by higher and lower trophic levels have been advanced as key forces structuring herbivorous arthropod communities around the globe. Here, we present a first quantification of the interaction structure of a herbivore-centered food web from the High Arctic. Targeting the Lepidoptera of Northeast Greenland, we introduce generalized overlap indices as a novel tool for comparing different types of indirect interactions. First, we quantify the scope for top-down-up interactions as the probability that a herbivore attacking plant species i itself fed as a larva on species j. Second, we gauge this herbivore overlap against the potential for bottom-up-down interactions, quantified as the probability that a parasitoid attacking herbivore species i itself developed as a larva on species j. Third, we assess the impact of interactions with other food web modules, by extending the core web around the key herbivore Sympistis nigrita to other predator guilds (birds and spiders). We find the host specificity of both herbivores and parasitoids to be variable, with broad generalists occurring in both trophic layers. Indirect links through shared resources and through shared natural enemies both emerge as forces with a potential for shaping the herbivore community. The structure of the host-parasitoid submodule of the food web suggests scope for classic apparent competition. Yet, based on predation experiments, we estimate that birds kill as many (8%) larvae of S. nigrita as do parasitoids (8%), and that spiders kill many more (38%). Interactions between these predator guilds may result in further complexities. Our results caution against broad generalizations from studies of limited food web modules, and show the potential for interactions within and between guilds of extended webs. They also add a data point from the northernmost insect communities on Earth, and describe the baseline structure of a food web facing imminent climate change.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3691180?pdf=render
spellingShingle Tomas Roslin
Helena Wirta
Tapani Hopkins
Bess Hardwick
Gergely Várkonyi
Indirect interactions in the High Arctic.
PLoS ONE
title Indirect interactions in the High Arctic.
title_full Indirect interactions in the High Arctic.
title_fullStr Indirect interactions in the High Arctic.
title_full_unstemmed Indirect interactions in the High Arctic.
title_short Indirect interactions in the High Arctic.
title_sort indirect interactions in the high arctic
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3691180?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT tomasroslin indirectinteractionsinthehigharctic
AT helenawirta indirectinteractionsinthehigharctic
AT tapanihopkins indirectinteractionsinthehigharctic
AT besshardwick indirectinteractionsinthehigharctic
AT gergelyvarkonyi indirectinteractionsinthehigharctic