Comparative plant-herbivore interactions involving willows and three gall-inducing sawfly species in the genus Pontania (Hymenoptera : Tenthredinidae)

Citation
P. Price et al., Comparative plant-herbivore interactions involving willows and three gall-inducing sawfly species in the genus Pontania (Hymenoptera : Tenthredinidae), ECOSCIENCE, 6(1), 1999, pp. 41-50
Citations number
46
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology
Journal title
ECOSCIENCE
ISSN journal
11956860 → ACNP
Volume
6
Issue
1
Year of publication
1999
Pages
41 - 50
Database
ISI
SICI code
1195-6860(1999)6:1<41:CPIIWA>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
The ovipositional preferences of female Pontania species, which induce leaf galls on willows, were examined in relation to the performance of progeny in terms of larval establishment and survival in galls. Three Pontania spec ies separated widely in geographic location were studied: Pontania sp. 1 on Salix scouleriana near Flagstaff, Arizona, U.S.A., Pontania amurensis on S . miyabeana near Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan, and Pontania pustulator on S. ph ylicifolia in eastern Finland, where two populations were examined. The spe cies are uncommon to rare in the locations studied and depend on disturbanc e resulting in populations of young willows or young ramets. All species sh owed a strong and significant ovipositional preference for longer shoots an d younger trees or ramets; older plants were not attacked. Survivorship dif fered considerably between species: Pontania sp. 1 had 80% of galls aborted , low parasitism and 16% survival, Pontania amurensis had few galls aborted , moderate parasitism and 70% survival, and Pontania pustulator was exposed to heavy parasitism and had a mean of 27% survival for the two populations . The pattern of ovipositional preference was not strongly related to proba bility of larval establishment in a gall for any of the populations studied . Only Pontania sp. 1 showed a weak but significant relationship between th e pattern of preference and larval survival. The apparent weak linkage betw een preference and performance may be accounted for by four alternative hyp otheses, i) Females are so selective that all galls initialed are situated on high-quality resources: females are specific to one species of willow, t hey are highly selective for very young plants, and on these plants they pr efer the longer shoot-length classes. ii) Low predictability of larval surv ival negates any benefits of a preference by females, iii) Preference evolv es independently of performance because young plants and long shoots provid e better resources in which females oviposit. iv) Young leaves, on which ga lls are initiated and larvae develop, are a relatively uniform, nutritious and predictable resource, such that there is a broad range of shoot lengths similarly suitable for larval survival. The results provide insights into the factors contributing to the rarity of these sawflies, their highly patc hy distribution over the landscape, and their population dynamics.