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Impact of the belowground herbivore and potential biological control agent, Ceutorhynchus scrobicollis, on Alliaria petiolata performance
We studied the influence of the root-crown weevil Ceutorhynchus scrobicollis on its host plant Alliaria petiolata, a European biennial herb that is currently invading much of temperate North America. Varying timing of attack and herbivore densities in a common garden allowed to assess seasonality of...
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Published in: | Biological control 2007-09, Vol.42 (3), p.355-364 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | We studied the influence of the root-crown weevil
Ceutorhynchus scrobicollis on its host plant
Alliaria petiolata, a European biennial herb that is currently invading much of temperate North America. Varying timing of attack and herbivore densities in a common garden allowed to assess seasonality of plant response, density-dependence of impact, and the effect of intraspecific competition on
C. scrobicollis recruitment (number of F
1 generation adults emerged). Data collected in the common garden were compared with data collected at field sites.
C. scrobicollis is a common weevil in Europe, frequently attaining high attack levels on its host plant. In the common garden, weevil attack decreased plant survival by up to 43%, reduced plant height by 54%, increased the number of shoots by up to four–fold and delayed seed ripening, but had no significant negative effect on seed production. Plants infested in spring allocated less biomass to aboveground plant parts, and remained smaller than plants attacked in autumn, indicating that the latter were able to partly compensate for weevil attack. Increasing weevil density rarely had an effect on
A. petiolata performance, and did not increase F
1 recruitment, suggesting strong intraspecific competition. At field sites,
C. scrobicollis attack is spread over a long time period, which probably alleviates intraspecific competition. In summary, attack by the root-crown feeding weevil,
C. scrobicollis, can substantially reduce growth and survival of
A. petiolata. If introduced as a biological control agent into North America,
C. scrobicollis is likely to decrease the fitness and competitive superiority of
A. petiolata. |
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ISSN: | 1049-9644 1090-2112 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.biocontrol.2007.06.005 |