Plant architecture affects periodical cicada oviposition behavior on native and non-native hosts. Oikos

Abstract

Variation in plant quality provides a basis for oviposition site selection for a variety of insects. Of the plant traits that infl uence plant-insect interactions, plant architecture has received little attention despite its putative role in modulating oviposition behavior. In a common garden comprised of native and non-native plant species, we assessed how host plant architecture and identity infl uenced the oviposition behavior of 17-year periodical cicadas (Homoptera: Cicadidae: Magicicada ). On each host, we quantifi ed the availability of branches suitable for oviposition and compared those measures with the branches used by ovipositing cicadas. Using this approach, we determined how the structural attributes of plants (i.e. branch diameter, length and incline) aff ected oviposition site selection. We then related cicada oviposition preferences to off spring performance by quantifying egg hatching success. On each host species, cicadas selectively used broader and longer branches for oviposition, suggesting that branch architecture provides a basis for oviposition behavior irrespective of plant identity. Broader and longer branches were more abundant on native than on non-native hosts in our study, contributing to greater oviposition loads among the native species. Egg hatching success was similar among native and nonnative hosts. However, it is possible that the use of native plants for oviposition could enhance off spring output because native hosts generally contained more viable eggs per egg nest and more egg nests per plant. While previous accounts of cicada oviposition preferences have focused on diff erences in oviposition loads among hosts, our evaluation of within-host branch selection by ovipositing cicadas helps to clarify oviposition preferences at a higher resolution and demonstrates that plant architecture provides an important basis for oviposition behavior. Furthermore, because branch structure can diff er substantially among host species, our results suggest that periodical cicadas may be sensitive to the changes in plant composition that often result from non-native plant invasions

    Similar works