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保护生态环境,维护生态安全
Protect ecological environment and maintain ecological security
保护生态环境,维护生态安全
Protect ecological environment and maintain ecological security
保护生态环境,维护生态安全
Protect ecological environment and maintain ecological security
科研成果

首页 >> 科学研究 >> 科研成果 >> 学术论文 >> 2015 >> 正文

The fig wasp followers and colonists of a widely introduced fig tree, Ficus microcarpa
2023-03-20  |  点击:[]

作者: Rong Wang, Robert Aylwin, Louise Barwell, Xiaoyong Chen, Yan Chen, Lien-Siang Chou, James Cobb, Daniel Collette, Lamara Craine, Robin M. Giblin-Davis, Salah Ghana, Maximilian Harper, Rhett D. Harrison, John R. McPherson, Yanqiong Peng, Rodrigo A.S. Pereira, Alfredo Reyes-Betancort, Lillian J.V. Rodriguez, Emily Strange, Simon van Noort, Huiwen Yang, Hui Yu, Stephen G. Compton

Abstract: 1. The transportation of plants and insects between countries often has negative consequences, but also provides opportunities to study community processes. Fig trees are a species-rich group of largely tropical and subtropical plants, characterised by their unusual inflorescences (figs).

2. Ficus microcarpa is a native of Asia and Australasia and frequently planted elsewhere. Widespread introductions of its pollinator fig wasp, Eupristina verticillata, have allowed the tree to reproduce and become increasingly invasive. Non-pollinating fig wasps (NPFW) are also widely introduced.

3. Here, we combine previously published records of the distributions of figwasps associated with F. microcarpa with the results of our extensive surveysacross much of its introduced and native ranges. At least 43 morpho-species offig wasps are associated with figs of F. microcarpa, most of which have only been recorded from this host. Twenty-one NPFW have become established outside their native ranges, but there has been only limited colonisation by locally native fig wasps within countries of introduction.

4. Fig wasp communities in colonised areas are less species-rich and contain a lower proportion of parasitoids. The pollinator and two phytophagous NPFW are the most widely introduced species, and usually the first species to arrive in countries where the host fig has become established. The pace of colonisation appears to be accelerating.

5. The rarity of faunal acquisition on introduced F. microcarpa contrasts strongly with that of introduced gall wasps on oaks and chestnuts.

Keywords: Agaonidae, biocontrol, community structure, dispersal, invasive species, parasitoid

DOI: 10.1111/icad.12111


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