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Warming, nitrogen deposition and provenance shift above-belowground insect interactions and host compensatory growth

Authors: Zhou, Xiao-Hui; He, Wei-Ming;

Warming, nitrogen deposition and provenance shift above-belowground insect interactions and host compensatory growth

Abstract

A study platform (i.e., a long-term experiment) was established at the Chengdu field site (30.67ºN, 104.06ºE) in June 2012. The purpose of this experiment was to provide identical climate scenarios and seeds for subsequent experiments and to minimize maternal effects. The study site belongs to a subtropical climate, where the mean annual precipitation is 918 mm and the mean annual temperature is 18.6 °C, and the soil is a ferralsol (Peng et al., 2019). The long-term experiment involved warming, N addition, and plant provenances, each with two levels. Experimental warming was achieved by heating with MSR-2420 infrared radiators, and the heater was suspended 1.5–2.0 m above the soil surface, roughly increasing air temperatures by 2 °C (Peng et al., 2019). Nitrogen enhancement was achieved by adding ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3) on the soil surface: adding a pulse of 1 g N m–2 as an aqueous ammonium nitrate solution on four occasions per year. Plant seeds were collected from the native and introduced ranges. A detailed description regarding the long-term experimental design has been given previously (Peng et al., 2019; Zhou and He, 2022). Study species Solidago canadensis L. (Asteraceae) is native to North America and an invader worldwide (Weber, 2001). This species has invaded several provinces in southeastern China, and is expanding rapidly (Peng et al., 2019). We selected two provenances of S. canadensis: one from its home range (i.e., Montana, USA) and the other from its introduced range (i.e., Zhejiang, China). We collected seeds from five populations in North America and China in 2011. We also selected Spodoptera litura (Fabricius) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) as a leaf-feeding insect (hereafter leaf insect) because it is a generalist herbivore and its larvae feed on plant leaves (Zhang et al., 2021), and Protaetia brevitarsis (Coleoptera) (Scarabaeidae: Cetoniinae) as a root-feeding insect (hereafter root insect) because it is a generalist herbivore and its larvae feed on plant roots (Yang et al., 2020; Wang et al., 2022). Insect feeding experiment To test the effects of climate warming, N deposition, and plant provenance on the bi-directional interactions between above- and belowground insect herbivores and host-plant compensatory growth, we conducted an experiment at the Chengdu field site (30.67ºN, 104.06ºE) in May–November 2021. This experiment involved four factors: plant provenance, temperature, N, and feeding modes; the first three factors had two levels and the last one had four levels, thereby yielding 32 combinations (2 provenances × 2 temperatures × 2 N levels × 4 feeding modes). We first randomly collected seeds from three S. canadensis populations per combination in the long-term experiment (see above) in December 2020. Next, we cultivated S. canadensis seedlings in May 2021 in a greenhouse, in which the air temperature and relative humidity ranged from 15–25 °C and 60–80%. We collected the same local topsoil as the long-term experiment, and then sifted it free from rocks. A mixture of local topsoil and sand (1:1 volume) was filled into plastic trays (42 cm length × 42 cm width × 5 cm depth). The seeds were planted in the trays, which were placed on benches in the greenhouse and watered as required. Three similar-sized seedlings were transplanted into 0.5-L pots filled with a mixture of local topsoil and sand (1:1 volume), and exposed to each of the eight combinations consisting of warming, N addition, and plant provenance in June 2021. It should be noted that all seedlings were subject to the same environments as maternal plants. For example, the seedlings were grown under warming if their maternal plants were previously exposed to warming. In addition, the warming and N treatments were identical between this experiment and the long-term experiment. All seedlings per pot had grown for five months before insect herbivory to provide enough leaf food for insects, and were thinned to only one similar-sized seedling among pots prior to insect feeding. We used four different herbivory treatments consisting of control (no herbivory), leaf herbivory only (LHO), root herbivory only (RHO), and leaf and root herbivory (LRH). Each herbivory was replicated 10 times, and there were 960 pots (8 maternal combinations × 4 feeding modes × 3 populations per combination × 10 replicates). Larvae of S. litura and P. brevitarsis were obtained from the Henan Jiyuan Keyun Company, and they arrived at the third instar on diet trays. For leaf herbivory only, a S. litura larva was weighed and placed on the leaves grown under eight combinations; for root herbivory only, a P. brevitarsis larva was weighed and placed on the roots grown under eight combinations; for leaf and root herbivory, a S. litura larva and a P. brevitarsis larva were weighed and simultaneously placed on the leaves and roots grown under eight combinations. Each pot was covered with an insect net to prevent insects from escaping and external interference. The insect feeding duration lasted for 14 days, in which S. litura survival was observed every day and P. brevitarsis survival was observed at the end of this experiment. Here, we focused on the relative growth rate and survival rate of insects. At the end of this experiment, we recorded the number of surviving leaf and/or root insects, and weighed them. The relative growth rate was calculated as larval mass gain per initial mass per unit time (mg g–1 d–1), and the survival rate was calculated as follows: the final larvae / the initial larvae feeding on a given host-plant population × 100%. Ten days after ending the insect herbivory, we harvested all plants, separated them into shoots and roots, oven-dried them at 65 °C for 48 h, and measured their biomass. The whole-plant biomass (g) was defined as the sum of shoot dry biomass and root dry biomass. The biomass of shoots, roots, and whole plants at the end of the experiment were selected to gauge their compensatory potential after insect herbivory damage. Data analysis Performance of above- and belowground insect herbivores Here, insect performance parameters included relative growth and survival rates. Before data analysis, we first tested whether our data met the assumptions of normality and homoscedasticity. Based on the residuals from the models, the Gaussian family was appropriate for our data. The data of relative growth were log-transformed to meet the assumptions of normality. We then performed linear mixed-effect models (i.e., four-way analysis of variance (ANOVA)) with plant populations as a random factor to test the fixed effects of warming, N addition, provenance and feeding, and their interaction effects on the relative growth rate of S. litura or P. brevitarsis. We used four-way ANOVA to test the fixed effects of warming, N addition, provenance and feeding, and their interaction on the survival rate of S. litura or P. brevitarsis. Please note that there were only two levels for feeding in these analyses: leaf herbivory only and leaf and root herbivory for S. litura, and root herbivory only and leaf and root herbivory for P. brevitarsis. Importantly, these analyses revealed unidirectional effects between above- and belowground insects. To unravel the bi-directional effects between above- and belowground insects, we calculated the difference between the treatment and control groups as the response variable, and treated leaf and root herbivory as the treatment group and leaf herbivory only or root herbivory only as the control group when quantifying the reciprocal effects of above- and belowground insects. Accordingly, we could analyze the type and outcome of interactions between above- and belowground insects. Here, we defined the effect of the direction from the initial insect herbivore to the subsequent insect herbivore as a plus (+) when the presence of the initial herbivore allows the subsequent herbivore to perform better compared to the absence of the effector herbivore, the effect as a minus (–) when the presence of the initial herbivore allows the subsequent herbivore to perform worse compared to the absence of the effector herbivore, and the effect as a neutral (0) when the presence of the initial herbivore has no effect on the subsequent herbivore. For a specific environment (ambient, warming, N addition, and warming plus N addition), the differences in relative growth and survival rates among feeding modes were tested using the "TukeyHSD function". All analyses were performed using the package "lme4" (Bates et al., 2015) and the package "multcomp" (Hothorn et al., 2008) in R 4.0.2 (R Core Team, 2020). Compensatory growth of the host plant S. canadensis after insect herbivore damage To address compensatory growth, we selected the ultimate biomass as a response variable when analyzing data. We used linear mixed-effect models (i.e., four-way ANOVA) with plant populations as a random factor to test the fixed effects of warming, N addition, provenance and feeding, and their interaction effects on the biomass of S. canadensis shoots, roots, and whole plants. For each plant provenance, the differences in shoot, root, and whole-plant biomass among four feeding modes under a given environment were tested using the "TukeyHSD function". We also considered leaf herbivory only, root herbivory only, and leaf and root herbivory as a whole. In this case, we used linear mixed-effect models, where plant populations and three feeding modes nested in feeding were treated as random factors, to test the fixed effects of warming, N addition, provenance and feeding, and their interaction effects on the shoot, root, and whole-plant biomass of S. canadensis. For a specific environment, the differences in shoot, root, and whole-plant biomass between the control and each feeding were tested using the "TukeyHSD function". All analyses were performed using the package "lme4" (Bates et al., 2015) and the package "multcomp" (Hothorn et al., 2008) in R 4.0.2 (R Core Team, 2020).

Above-belowground insect herbivore interactions and plant compensatory growth are crucial for reshaping the fitness of invasive plants, and it is likely that climate warming, nitrogen (N) deposition, and plant provenance influence this interaction and growth in a complex way. We performed an experiment with Solidago canadensis from home and introduced ranges, leaf-chewing Spodoptera litura, and root-feeding Protaetia brevitarsis under climate warming and N deposition, and addressed how these abiotic stressors and plant provenance jointly shaped the reciprocal effects between S. litura and P. brevitarsis and the compensatory growth of S. canadensis after herbivory. Under ambient conditions, S. litura and P. brevitarsis inhibited each other on the basis of growth; warming, N addition or warming plus N addition shifted or even reversed this competition depending on provenance. While the survival-based above-belowground interactions differed from growth-based ones, warming or warming plus N addition also shifted or even reversed the neutralism or amensalism detected under ambient conditions depending on provenance. Solidago canadensis from its home range was more tolerant of herbivory than from its introduced range under ambient conditions; warming, N addition or warming plus N addition decreased the plant compensatory growth of native S. canadensis, but increased that of invasive S. canadensis relative to ambient conditions. These findings suggest that climate warming and N deposition could enhance positive above-belowground insect interactions, increasing insect pressures on S. canadensis, and that plant provenance might be important in mediating climate change effects on insect interactions and host compensatory growth under plant invasions.

Funding provided by: National Key Research and Development Project*Crossref Funder Registry ID: Award Number: 2022YFC2601102 Funding provided by: Hebei Agricultural UniversityROR ID: https://ror.org/009fw8j44Award Number: YJ2022023 Funding provided by: National Natural Science Foundation of ChinaROR ID: https://ror.org/01h0zpd94Award Number: 32301473

Related Organizations
Keywords

biogeographic difference, above-belowground interaction, Plant compensatory growth, Global Change

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citations
This is an alternative to the "Influence" indicator, which also reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically).
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popularity
This indicator reflects the "current" impact/attention (the "hype") of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network.
BIP!Popularity provided by BIP!
influence
This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically).
BIP!Influence provided by BIP!
impulse
This indicator reflects the initial momentum of an article directly after its publication, based on the underlying citation network.
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