Data for: Traits-mediated responses of caterpillar communities to spongy moth outbreaks and subsequent tebufenozide treatments

All raw and derived data used to produce the results detailed in the article "Traits-mediated responses of caterpillar communities to spongy moth outbreaks and subsequent tebufenozide treatments" published in Ecological Applications (2023).

Outbreaks of the spongy moth Lymantria dispar can have devastating impacts on forest resources and ecosystems. Lepidoptera-specific insecticides, such as Bacillus thuringiensis var. kurstaki (BTK) and tebufenozide, are often deployed to prevent heavy defoliation of the forest canopy. While it has been suggested that using BTK poses less risk to non-target Lepidoptera than leaving an outbreak untreated, in situ testing of this assumption has been impeded by methodological challenges. The trade-offs between insecticide use and outbreaks have yet to be addressed for tebufenozide, which is believed to have stronger side effects than BTK. We investigated the short-term trade-offs between tebufenozide treatments and no-action strategies for the non-target herbivore community in forest canopies. Over three years, Lepidoptera and Symphyta larvae were sampled by canopy fogging in 48 oak stands in southeast Germany during and after a spongy moth outbreak. Half of the sites were treated with tebufenozide and changes in canopy cover were monitored. We contrasted the impacts of tebufenozide and defoliator outbreaks on the abundance, diversity, and functional structure of chewing herbivore communities. Tebufenozide treatments strongly reduced Lepidoptera up to six weeks after spraying. Populations gradually converged back to control levels after two years. Shelter-building species dominated caterpillar assemblages in treated plots in the post-spray weeks while flight-dimorphic species were slow to recover and remained underrepresented in treated stands two years post-treatment. Spongy moth outbreaks had minor effects on leaf chewer communities. Summer Lepidoptera decreased only when severe defoliation occurred, whereas Symphyta declined one year after defoliation. Polyphagous species with only partial host plant overlap with the spongy moth were absent from heavily defoliated sites, suggesting greater sensitivity of generalists to defoliation-induced plant responses. These results demonstrate that both tebufenozide treatments and spongy moth outbreaks alter canopy herbivore communities. Tebufenozide had a stronger and longer-lasting impact, but it was restricted to Lepidoptera, whereas the outbreak affected both Lepidoptera and Symphyta. These results are tied to the fact that only half of the outbreak sites experienced severe defoliation. This highlights the limited accuracy of current defoliation forecast methods, which are used as the basis for the decision to spray insecticides.

Daten und Ressourcen

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Details

Feld Wert
Eintrag erstellt von Benjamin Leroy
Email des Eintragerstellers benjamin.leroy@tum.de
Ansprechpartner
    Maintainer: Benjamin Leroy
    Maintainer Email: benjamin.leroyfoo(at)tum.de
Sprache English
Version 2.0
Anfangsdatum 2019-04-30
Enddatum 2021-06-28
Räumliche Ausdehnung

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Zuletzt aktualisiert 12. März. 2024, 23:09 (UTC)
Erstellt 27. Juni. 2023, 11:44 (UTC)