Environmental thermal levels affect the phenological relationships between the chestnut gall wasp and its parasitoids
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2019
Abstract:
Studies of thermal level-related asynchrony in a host-parasitoid relationship
are necessary to understand the effects of climate change on new host-parasitoid
interactions. In the Asian chestnut gall wasp Dryocosmus kuriphilus (Hymenoptera:
Cynipidae) and its Chalcidoidea parasitoids, phenological synchrony is assumed to be
weather-dependent in a new area of expansion. To evaluate the effects of environmental
thermal regimes on the host, a phenology model for different cynipid stages (larvae,
pupae, adults, and adult emergence) and a host-parasitoid phenological estimator are
developed in three chestnut fields during two successive growth seasons and subsequently
validated in areas with chestnut fields at two different altitudes. Comparisons
of the timings of the juvenile and adult stages with those of the parasitoid complex
demonstrate that the shortest period of occurrence for cynipids within galls has negative
effects on the host-parasitoid relationships at higher temperature levels, thereby increasing
phenological asynchrony for some parasitoids species. Reducing the development
time of pupae and adults decreases the likelihood of success for some parasitoid species
at higher temperature levels. We also record the extension of the gall wasp development
time (approximately 15 days) at higher altitudes (linked to a lower mean temperature of
approximately 1.5
?
C). These results highlight how parasitization on the new hosts is
dependent on the host phenology and, in the present study, is limited by the short duration
of the presence of the host in galls, which could explain the considerable differences
in cynipid gall wasp parasitization recorded at different altimeters.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
10.1111/phen.12280
Elenco autori:
Bernardo, Umberto
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