Using Artificial Caterpillars To Test The ‘Enemies Hypothesis’

In tropical forests, plant diversity, plant species composition and plant structures affect the top-down control of herbivorous insects.

AsianScientist (Feb. 13, 2017) – The ‘enemies hypothesis’—which suggests that predators are more effective at controlling their prey when the environment is more diverse—holds true for tropical environments, according to researchers at the Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Their study, published in Oikos, used artifical caterpillars to investigate to what extent species richness, composition and structural features of forest fragments (i.e. patch size, edge distance and canopy openness) contribute to explaining observed predation rates.

Studies in temperate forests and agroecosystems support the enemies hypothesis that predators exert more effective top-down control of herbivorous insects with increasing plant diversity. However, the hypothesis remains understudied in tropical forests.

To see if the enemies hypothesis is true in tropical environments, the researchers used artificial caterpillars made of modeling clay to investigate if predation rates were affected by the three types of vegetation strata: trees, saplings and herbs.

The predation experiments were conducted in 16 plots selected from a set of previously established permanent forest fragment plots in Menglun, Xishuangbanna. At each survey plot, the researchers established three 4 m x 5 m grids where 20 artificial caterpillars were set on plant leaves 1 m apart from each other.

The researchers also conducted behavioral experiments to test whether ants, the major predator of the sampling sites, show preference towards (or against) plasticine models compared with real caterpillars.

They found that predation was mainly driven by ants. Predation rates showed a similar positive relation to species richness for tree and herb strata.

Among the vegetation strata, they found that predation was most strongly associated with herbs, suggesting that major predators may utilize the ground and understory stratum. Predation rates were also significantly correlated with sapling and herb densities and herb species composition.

Decreased sapling density and increased herb cover predicted higher predation rates. This suggests that, besides species richness, turnover of plant species, particularly that of understory plants, is strongly associated with changes in predation rate.


The article can be found at: Leles et al. (2017) Does Plant Diversity Increase Top–down Control of Herbivorous Insects in Tropical Forest?

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Source: Chinese Academy of Sciences; Photo: Bruno Leles.
Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily reflect the views of AsianScientist or its staff.

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