276 research outputs found
Arthropods from ‘ōhi‘a lehua (Myrtaceae: Metrosideros polymorpha), with new records for the Hawaiian Islands
This paper presents new records, range extensions, and a checklist of arthropod species
found associated with the most common and widespread native tree in the Hawaiian
Islands, ‘öhi‘a lehua (Myrtaceae: Metrosideros polymorpha Gaudichaud-Beaupré).
Metrosideros polymorpha is found on all the main islands, naturally occurs from sea level
to tree line (>2000 m), in dry, mesic, and wet forests, and is the canopy dominant in old
growth and the first woody colonist on recent basaltic lava flows (Dawson & Stemmerman,
1990). Numerous insect species use ‘öhi‘a lehua as a resource for either food or
habitat space, and it may have the largest fauna of any native plant (Southwood, 1960;
Stein, 1983). Metrosideros is an important, year-round nectar resource for native bees,
moths, thrips and other insects, and for native nectarivorous birds, such as the ‘apapane
(Himatione sanguinea), ‘i‘iwi (Vestiara coccinea), and ‘akohekohe (Palmeria dolei).
Metrosideros also provides important habitat for birds that forage for arthropod prey in
the foliage (e.g., ‘akepa [Loxops coccineus]) and bark (e.g., Hawai‘i creeper [Oreomystis
mana]). It can be argued that M. polymorpha is the backbone of Hawaiian forests and one
of the most important resources for the long-term stability of ecosystems and watersheds
in the islands
Attenuation of top-down and bottom-up forces in a complex terrestrial community
Carnivore (top-down) and resource (bottom-up) influences in food webs are strong and pervasive, but few studies have investigated their interactive effects in species-rich terrestrial ecosystems. This study focused on arthropods associated with the dominant tree species, Metrosideros polymorpha (Myrtaceae), in Hawaiian forests. Severe soil nutrient limitation on a 120-yr-old lava flow was removed by fertilization and combined with bird predator exclusion cages in a randomized block design. Arthropod densities were measured from clipped foliage at the outset and conclusion of a 33-mo experiment, and their biomass was estimated using regression equations. Metrosideros foliar nitrogen, tree growth, and biomass increased directly in response to fertilization but did not change with bird exclusion. Fertilization increased detritivore densities but not biomass, and both density and biomass of herbivores, while bird exclusion increased both density and biomass of carnivores. Fertilization also increased spider density and biomass, but bird exclusion increased spider numbers (15 species) only in high resource plots. Overall, trophic level biomass responses were less pronounced than density because smaller bodied individuals responded more to enrichment. Bottom-up factors controlled basal trophic levels, and detritivores comprised the largest fraction of arthropod density and biomass. Conversely, top-down impacts were apparent but variable, limited to higher order consumers, and did not cascade to the level of primary producers. These experimental results were consistent with the view that complex forest ecosystems are structured on a bottom-up template
Richness and species composition of arboreal arthropods affected by nutrients and predators: a press experiment
A longstanding goal for ecologists is to understand the processes that maintain biological diversity in communities, yet few studies have investigated the combined effects of predators and resources on biodiversity in natural ecosystems. We fertilized nutrient limited plots and excluded insectivorous birds in a randomized block design, and examined the impacts on arthropods associated with the dominant tree in the Hawaiian Islands, Metrosideros polymorpha (Myrtaceae). After 33 mo, the species load (per foliage mass) of herbivores and carnivores increased with fertilization, but rarified richness (standardized to abundance) did not change. Fertilization depressed species richness of arboreal detritivores, and carnivore richness dropped in caged, unfertilized plots, both because of the increased dominance of common, introduced species with treatments. Herbivore species abundance distributions were more equitable than other trophic levels following treatments, and fertilization added specialized native species without changing relativized species richness. Overall, bird removal and nutrient addition treatments on arthropod richness acted largely independently, but with countervailing influences that obscured distinct top-down and bottom-up effects on different trophic levels. This study demonstrates that species composition, biological invasions, and the individuality of species traits may complicate efforts to predict the interactive effects of resources and predation on species diversity in food webs
Pseudo-Likelihood Inference
Simulation-Based Inference (SBI) is a common name for an emerging family of
approaches that infer the model parameters when the likelihood is intractable.
Existing SBI methods either approximate the likelihood, such as Approximate
Bayesian Computation (ABC) or directly model the posterior, such as Sequential
Neural Posterior Estimation (SNPE). While ABC is efficient on low-dimensional
problems, on higher-dimensional tasks, it is generally outperformed by SNPE,
which leverages function approximation. In this paper, we propose
Pseudo-Likelihood Inference (PLI), a new method that brings neural
approximation into ABC, making it competitive on challenging Bayesian system
identification tasks. By utilizing integral probability metrics, we introduce a
smooth likelihood kernel with an adaptive bandwidth that is updated based on
information-theoretic trust regions. Thanks to this formulation, our method (i)
allows for optimizing neural posteriors via gradient descent, (ii) does not
rely on summary statistics, and (iii) enables multiple observations as input.
In comparison to SNPE, it leads to improved performance when more data is
available. The effectiveness of PLI is evaluated on four classical SBI
benchmark tasks and on a highly dynamic physical system, showing particular
advantages on stochastic simulations and multi-modal posterior landscapes.Comment: 27 pages, 12 figures, Published as a conference paper at NeurIPS 202
Metastable anisotropy orientation of nematic quantum Hall fluids
We analyze the experimental observation of metastable anisotropy resistance
orientation at half filled quantum Hall fluids by means of a model of a quantum
nematic liquid in an explicit symmetry breaking potential. We interpret the
observed ``rotation'' of the anisotropy axis as a process of nucleation of
nematic domains and compute the nucleation rate within this model. By comparing
with experiment, we are able to predict the critical radius of nematic bubbles,
. Each domain contains about electrons.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, final version as will appear in PR
Two ant species (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) new to the Hawaiian Islands
Two new ant species records are reported for the Hawaiian Islands. Specimens for both species were first collected in the spring of 2000 by K-12 students and classes as part of an ongoing survey for the little fire ant, Wasmannia auropunctata (Roger), on Hawai‘i Island. Discovery of the little fire ant on Hawai‘i and Kaua‘i (Conant & Hirayama, 2000) elicited survey and control activities by the Hawaii Department of Agriculture (HDOA) and stimulated the creation of a traveling educational curriculum through the University of Hawai‘i. Intermediate and high school students collected ants from their backyard environment with the goal of finding additional infestations of W. auropunctata. One of us (DSG) analyzed and identified all ants in these samples, which contained the two species new to Hawai‘i, and mapped their distributions. Details of this program will be reported elsewhere (D. Gruner, unpubl.). Concurrently, HDOA (RAH. & MEC) discovered one of these ant species during surveys on the island of O‘ahu
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The effects of foliar pubescence and nutrient enrichment on arthropod communities of Metrosideros polymorpha (Myrtaceae)
1. Nutrient resource availability and host-plant foliar pubescence both influence arthropod food webs, but multifactor studies are needed to understand their interdependence and relative importance. Arthropods were sampled by clipping foliage from Metrosideros polymorpha (Myrtaceae) trees of pubescent, glabrous, and intermediate leaf forms on fertilised and unfertilised plots.
2. Fertilisation decreased leaf mass per area (LMA) but did not change the relative mass of pubescence within leaf morphological classes.
3. Fertilisation increased densities of individuals in four taxonomic orders,
densities of individuals and species of all trophic levels, and the biomass of Collembola and Homoptera. Herbivore relative diversity (Shannon H0) also increased with fertilisation, but detritivore diversity declined due to increasing dominance of Salina celebensis (Schaeffer) (Collembola).
4. Detritivore density, driven again by S. celebensis, increased with decreasing leaf pubescence, but Heteroptera and Acari were most abundant on the intermediate pubescence class, and Psocoptera density and biomass increased with increasing pubescence. Trophic-level species density did not change with leaf morphological class, but relative diversity of all arthropods and of detritivores increased with increasing pubescence.
5. Both resource availability and leaf pubescence affected Metrosideros arthropod
communities. However, the pervasive positive influence of fertilisation did not translate to compositional shifts, and there were no interactions with leaf morphological class. In contrast, the effects of leaf pubescence on arthropod density, biomass, and diversity were more restricted taxonomically, and nonparametric MANOVA and redundancy analyses demonstrated significant differentiation in community composition on the pubescent morphology
Soil mediates the interaction of coexisting entomopathogenic nematodes with an insect host
We tested for soil substrate effects on the movement and infectivity of naturally co-occurring entomopathogenic nematodes Steinernema feltiae and Heterorhabditis marelatus, alone and in combination. We manipulated the presence and bulk density of soil and added Galleria mellonella baits within capped and perforated 15 mL centrifuge tubes. Sampling tubes were then deployed in situ into field and laboratory settings as experimental traps for infective juveniles. In comparisons with standard soil collections from Lupinus arboreus rhizospheres, sampling tubes were equally sensitive to the presence of H. marelatus and more sensitive to S. feltiae. In laboratory microcosms, both EPN species infected Galleria at high frequencies in tubes lacking soil and in the absence of heterospecifics. Infection frequency of S. feltiae was unaffected by the presence of H. marelatus, but it declined with higher soil bulk density inside tubes. In contrast, detectable infection frequency by H. marelatus was reduced only marginally by the presence of soil but severely by the presence of S. feltiae. Thus, the presence of soil in tubes reversed the identity of dominant species infecting Galleria in tubes, an effect magnified when soils were compacted. Moreover, S. feltiae rarely moved into tubes lacking Galleria baits, whereas H. marelatus colonized unbaited tubes 4- to 5-fold more frequently than S. feltiae. In situ, sampling tubes acted as filters to reduce interference and contamination by fungal pathogens common in field soils. The method allows precision sampling with minimal soil disturbance while protecting bait insects from scavengers. Manipulation of tube design may allow selective sampling of EPN species, depending on the abiotic characteristics of soils, and the biology, behavior, and interspecific interactions of coexisting species
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