Dispersal strategies of phytophagous insects at a local scale: adaptive potential of aphids in an agricultural environment
Authored by Eric Lombaert, Roger Boll, Laurent Lapchin
Date Published: 2006
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-6-75
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Statistical Analysis Software (SAS)
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background: The spread of agriculture greatly modified the selective
pressures exerted by plants on phytophagous insects, by providing these
insects with a high-level resource, structured in time and space. The
life history, behavioural and physiological traits of some insect
species may have evolved in response to these changes, allowing them to
crowd on crops and to become agricultural pests. Dispersal, which is one
of these traits, is a key concept in evolutionary biology but has been
over-simplified in most theoretical studies. We evaluated the impact of
the local-scale dispersal strategy of phytophagous insects on their
fitness, using an individual-based model to simulate population dynamics
and dispersal between leaves and plants, by walking and flying, of the
aphid Aphis gossypii, a major agricultural pest, in a melon field. We
compared the optimal values for dispersal parameters in the model with
the corresponding observed values in experimental trials.
Results: We show that the rates of walking and flying disperser
production on leaves were the most important traits determining the
fitness criteria, whereas dispersal distance and the clustering of
flying dispersers on the target plant had no effect. We further show
that the effect of dispersal parameters on aphid fitness depended
strongly on plant characteristics.
Conclusion: Parameters defining the dispersal strategies of aphids at a
local scale are key components of the fitness of these insects and may
thus be essential in the adaptation to agricultural environments that
are structured in space and time. Moreover, the fact that the effect of
dispersal parameters on aphid fitness depends strongly on plant
characteristics suggests that traits defining aphid dispersal strategies
may be a cornerstone of host-plant specialization.
Tags
Competition
Evolution
movement
Aggregation
Populations
Density-dependence
Natural enemies
Homoptera
Gossypii glover
Migratory urge