INSECT COMMUNITIES ON EXPERIMENTAL MUGWORT (ARTEMISIA-VULGARIS L.) PLOTS ALONG AN URBAN GRADIENT

Authors
Citation
C. Denys et H. Schmidt, INSECT COMMUNITIES ON EXPERIMENTAL MUGWORT (ARTEMISIA-VULGARIS L.) PLOTS ALONG AN URBAN GRADIENT, Oecologia, 113(2), 1998, pp. 269-277
Citations number
38
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00298549
Volume
113
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
269 - 277
Database
ISI
SICI code
0029-8549(1998)113:2<269:ICOEM(>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
We studied the ability of insect herbivores and their natural enemies to colonize exposed, potted mugwort plants (Artemisia vulgaris L.) alo ng a rural-urban gradient in 1994 in Hamburg (northern Germany). Ectop hagous insects, leafmines and galls were monitored weekly from mid-May to mid-September. Endophagous insects were counted by harvesting and dissecting the stems at the end of the growing season. The rural-urban gradient was characterized by a gradient of vegetation-free areas and increasing proportion of ground covered in concrete, tarmac, paving a nd other impermeable surfaces surrounding the Artemisia plots, i.e. si x different zones of increasing isolation. Numbers of insect species ( herbivores, parasitoids and predators) decreased along the gradient fr om 43 to 12. Monophagous herbivores were not more affected than polyph agous herbivores, but parasitoids, especially-rare species, were more strongly affected by isolation than predators. Some dominant herbivoro us species were very successful colonizers and occurred in inner city sites devoid of all natural vegetation. Sometimes their abundance incr eased in the inner city to significantly higher densities than in the urban fringe. Isolation appeared to be the main reason for the observe d patterns, since area and soil conditions were held constant in the e xperiment. Microclimate and pollution were considered to play a minor role.