Changes in the distribution of multispecies pest assemblages affect levels of crop damage in warming tropical Andes
Authored by Francois Rebaudo, Veronica Crespo-Perez, Olivier Dangles, Jacques Regniere, Isabelle Chuine
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12656
Sponsors:
McKnight Foundation
French National Research Agency (ANR)
Platforms:
BioSim
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Climate induced species range shifts might create novel interactions
among species that may outweigh direct climatic effects. In an
agricultural context, climate change might alter the intensity of
competition or facilitation interactions among pests with, potentially, negative consequences on the levels of damage to crop. This could
threaten the productivity of agricultural systems and have negative
impacts on food security, but has yet been poorly considered in studies.
In this contribution, we constructed and evaluated process-based species
distribution models for three invasive potato pests in the Tropical
Andean Region. These three species have been found to co-occur and
interact within the same potato tuber, causing different levels of
damage to crop. Our models allowed us to predict the current and future
distribution of the species and therefore, to assess how damage to crop
might change in the future due to novel interactions. In general, our
study revealed the main challenges related to distribution modeling of
invasive pests in highly heterogeneous regions. It yielded different
results for the three species, both in terms of accuracy and
distribution, with one species surviving best at lower altitudes and the
other two performing better at higher altitudes. As to future
distributions our results suggested that the three species will show
different responses to climate change, with one of them expanding to
higher altitudes, another contracting its range and the other shifting
its distribution to higher altitudes. These changes will result in novel
areas of co-occurrence and hence, interactions of the pests, which will
cause different levels of damage to crop. Combining population dynamics
and species distribution models that incorporate interspecific trade-off
relationships in different environments revealed a powerful approach to
provide predictions about the response of an assemblage of interacting
species to future environmental changes and their impact on process
rates.
Tags
Impacts
Climate-change
Temperature
Food security
Extinction risk
Species distribution models
Moth phthorimaea-operculella
Geographic distributions
Biotic interactions
Lepidoptera