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Frontiers of Earth Science

ISSN 2095-0195

ISSN 2095-0209(Online)

CN 11-5982/P

Postal Subscription Code 80-963

2018 Impact Factor: 1.205

Front. Earth Sci.    2017, Vol. 11 Issue (2) : 321-331    https://doi.org/10.1007/s11707-016-0582-3
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Development of defoliating insects and their preferences for host plants under varying temperatures in a subtropical evergreen forest in eastern China
Jun JING1,2, Lingdan XIA1,2, Kai LI1,2()
1. School of Life Sciences, East China Normal University, Shanghai 200241, China
2. Shanghai Key Laboratory for Urban Ecology Processes and Eco-Restoration, East China Normal University, Shanghai 200241, China
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Abstract

The aim of this work was to understand the development of defoliating insects and their preferences for host plants under varying temperatures in a subtropical evergreen broad-leaved forest in China. We measured the main developmental parameters of three typical defoliating insects (i.e., Ourapteryx ebuleata szechuana, Biston marginata, and Euproctis angulata) and their preferences for five host plants at temperatures from 16°C to 31°C at 3°C intervals in the Tiantong National Forest Research station in eastern China. The results showed the following. 1) An appropriate rise in temperature increases the survival rate with an increase in the number of offspring. The developmental durations for these three insects were shortened, and pupal weight increased with an increase in temperature. 2) A shift in the preference for host plants for these three insects was observedat elevated temperatures. They all preferred to feed on Schima superba and Castanopsis sclerophylla at elevated temperatures, showing an opposite response to the other three plants. The daily leaf consumption of the three insects was positively correlated with their feeding preference, with more leaves being consumed from the plants they preferred. 3) For O. ebuleata szechuana larvae, daily leaf consumption initially increased and then decreased with increasing temperatures. In contrast, Biston marginata and Euproctis angulata larvae consumed more leaves at elevated temperatures. The feeding preferences of O. ebuleata szechuana and Biston marginata were more sensitive to changing temperatures than that of Euproctis angulata laevae. We concluded that increased numbers of offspring and generations, pupal weights, and a shift in preference to two plants for these three defoliating insects might lead to severe damage to these two plants which would enhance the fragmentation and decrease the stability of the forest communities under changing temperatures. Meanwhile, the variations in the responses of defoliating insects to the changing temperatures should be taken into consideration for the pest management of forests to adapt to the changing climate.

Keywords defoliating insects      elevated temperature      development dynamics      feeding behavior      subtropical evergreen forest     
Corresponding Author(s): Kai LI   
Issue Date: 19 May 2017
 Cite this article:   
Jun JING,Lingdan XIA,Kai LI. Development of defoliating insects and their preferences for host plants under varying temperatures in a subtropical evergreen forest in eastern China[J]. Front. Earth Sci., 2017, 11(2): 321-331.
 URL:  
https://academic.hep.com.cn/fesci/EN/10.1007/s11707-016-0582-3
https://academic.hep.com.cn/fesci/EN/Y2017/V11/I2/321
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