More is not necessarily better: the impact of limiting and excessive nutrients on herbivore population growth rates

Authors: ZEHNDER, CARALYN B.; HUNTER, MARK D.1

Source: Ecological Entomology, Volume 34, Number 4, August 2009 , pp. 535-543(9)

Publisher: Blackwell Publishing

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Abstract:

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1. The body tissues of insect herbivores contain higher concentrations of nitrogen and phosphorus than do their host plants, leading to an elemental mismatch that can limit herbivore growth, fecundity and ultimately influence population dynamics. While low nutrient availability can limit herbivore growth and reproduction, nutrient levels that exceed an organism's nutritional requirements, i.e. an organisms' threshold elemental ratio, can also decrease performance.

2. We conducted a laboratory experiment to examine the impacts of nitrogen and phosphorus additions on population growth rates of a phloem-feeding insect herbivore.

3. Herbivore per capita population growth rates were highest at intermediate foliar nitrogen concentrations, indicating a performance cost on the highest nitrogen foliage. While there was no direct effect of foliar phosphorus concentration on insect performance, there was a strong and unexpected indirect effect. High soil phosphorus availability increased both foliar nitrogen concentrations and aphid tissue nitrogen, resulting in low population growth rates when both soil nitrogen and phosphorus availabilities were high.

4. In this study, experimental increases in foliar nitrogen levels led to a decrease in herbivore performance suggesting that excessive nutrient levels can limit herbivore population growth rates.

Keywords: Aphis nerii; Asclepisa; ecological stoichiometry; growth rate hypothesis; threshold elemental ratio

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2311.2009.01101.x

Affiliations: 1: Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, U.S.A.

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