Evolved phenological cueing strategies show variable responses to climate change

Collin B. Edwards and Louie H. Yang

Abstract

Several studies have documented a global pattern of phenological advancement that is consistent with ongoing climate change. However, the magnitude of these phenological shifts is highly variable across taxa and locations. This variability of phenological responses has been difficult to explain mechanistically. To examine how the evolution of multi-trait cueing strategies could produce variable responses to climate change, we constructed a model in which organisms evolve strategies that integrate multiple environmental cues to inform anticipatory phenological decisions. We simulated the evolution of phenological cueing strategies in multiple environments, using historic climate data from 78 locations in North America and Hawaii to capture features of climatic correlation structures in the real world. Organisms in our model evolved diverse strategies that were spatially autocorrelated across locations on a continental scale, showing that similar strategies tend to evolve in similar climates. Within locations, organisms often evolved a wide range of strategies that showed similar response phenotypes and fitness outcomes under historical conditions. However, these strategies responded differently to novel climatic conditions, with variable fitness consequences. Our model shows how the evolution of phenological cueing strategies can explain observed variation in phenological shifts and unexpected responses to climate change.

The American Naturalist

https://doi.org/10.1086/711650

Feeding and damage‐induced volatile cues make beetles disperse and produce a more even distribution of damage for sagebrush

Richard Karban and Louie H. Yang

Abstract

1. Induced plant responses to herbivory are common and we have learned a lot about the mechanisms of induced resistance and their effects on herbivore performance. We know less about their effects on herbivore behavior and especially on spatial patterns of damage.

2. Theoretical models predict that induced responses can cause patterns of damage to become aggregated, random, or even. A recent model predicted that informed herbivore movement coupled with communication between plants would make damage more even within individual plants. We tested these predictions in the field using a specialist beetle (Trirhabda pilosa ) that feeds on sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata ). Both the beetle and the plant are well‐documented to respond to damage‐induced volatile cues.

3. Beetle larvae were more likely to move from damaged leaves and leaves that had been exposed to volatiles from nearby damaged leaves compared to undamaged control leaves. Previous lab results indicated that beetles were more likely to choose undamaged leaves compared to damaged leaves or those exposed to volatile cues of damage.

4. A comparison of damage patterns early in the season and after completion of beetle feeding revealed that variance in damage among branches decreased as the season progressed; i.e., damage became more evenly distributed among the branches within a plant. Larvae damaged many leaves on a plant but removed relatively little tissue from each leaf.

5. Herbivore movement and the spatial patterns of damage that it creates can be important in determining effects on plant fitness and other population processes. Dispersion of damage deserves more consideration in plant‐herbivore studies.

Journal of Animal Ecology

https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13270

Consumer responses to experimental pulsed subsidies in isolated vs. connected habitats

Amber Wright, Louie H. Yang, Jonah Piovia-Scott, David A. Spiller, and Thomas W. Schoener

Abstract

Increases in consumer abundance following a resource pulse can be driven by diet shifts, aggregation, and reproductive responses, with combined responses expected to result in shorter response lags and larger magnitude numerical increases. Previous work on large Bahamian islands has shown that lizards (Anolis sagrei) increased in abundance in response to pulses of seaweed deposition, which provide abundant marine-derived prey resources. These numerical responses were associated with rapid diet shifts and aggregation, followed by increased reproduction. These dynamics are likely different on isolated small islands because lizards cannot readily immigrate or emigrate. We evaluated the effects of experimental pulses of seaweed deposition that varied in frequency and magnitude on lizard diet shifts and numerical responses on small islands (n = 16) and in plots on large mainland islands (n = 20) over five years. We found that pulses of seaweed deposition created persistent increases in lizard abundance on small islands regardless of pulse frequency or magnitude, which may have occurred because the initial resource pulse facilitated population establishment, possibly via enhanced overwinter survival. In contrast with a previous experiment, we did not detect numerical responses on mainlands, despite the fact that lizards consumed more marine resources in subsidized plots. This lack of a numerical response may be due to rapid aggregation and disaggregation or stronger suppression of A. sagrei by their predators on mainlands. Our results highlight the importance of habitat connectivity in governing ecological responses to resource pulses and suggest that disaggregation and changes in survivorship may be underappreciated drivers of pulse-associated dynamics.

The American Naturalist

https://doi.org/10.1086/710040

Species-specific, age-varying plant traits affect herbivore growth and survival

Louie H. Yang, Meredith L. Cenzer, Laura J. Morgan, and Griffin W. Hall

Abstract

Seasonal windows of opportunity represent intervals of time within a year during which organisms have improved prospects of achieving life history aims such as growth or reproduction, and may be commonly structured by temporal variation in abiotic factors, bottom-up factors, and top-down factors. Although seasonal windows of opportunity are likely to be common, few studies have examined the factors that structure seasonal windows of opportunity in time. Here, we experimentally manipulated host plant age in two milkweed species (Asclepias fascicularis and Asclepias speciosa) in order to investigate the role of plant species-specific and plant age-varying traits on the survival and growth of monarch caterpillars (Danaus plexippus). We show that the two plant species showed diverging trajectories of defense traits with increasing age. These species-specific and age-varying host plant traits significantly affected the growth and survival of monarch caterpillars through both resource quality- and resource quantity-based constraints. The effects of plant age on monarch developmental success were comparable to and sometimes larger than those of plant species identity. We conclude that species-specific and age-varying plant traits are likely to be important factors with the potential to structure seasonal windows of opportunity for monarch development, and examine the implications of these findings for both broader patterns in the ontogeny of plant defense traits and the specific ecology of milkweed-monarch interactions in a changing world.

Ecology

https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3029

Toward a more temporally explicit framework for community ecology (Open Access)

Louie H. Yang

Abstract

Although ecologists have long understood the fundamentally dynamic nature of communities, ecology has until recently seemed to emphasize other aspects of ecological complexity, such as diversity and spatial structure, ahead of temporal variation. Climate change has made studies into the temporal dimensions of community ecology more immediate and urgent, and has exposed the limits of our general understanding about how species interactions change over time. Here, I suggest four specific ways to continue building towards a more temporally explicit understanding of community ecology: 1) by increasing the representation of temporal change in interaction networks, 2) by developing both specific and general insights into event-driven dynamics, 3) by developing and testing sequential hypotheses to describe proposed explanations that unfold over time, and 4) by characterizing seasonal windows of opportunity. A great deal about the temporal dynamics of communities remains uncertain, but temporally explicit studies have the potential to improve our fundamental understanding of how communities function.

Ecological Research

https://doi.org/10.1111/1440-1703.12099

Open Access PDF

Helping Marsh Harbour recover from Hurricane Dorian

Category 5 hurricane Dorian pummeled Marsh Harbour, Abaco, The Bahamas for several days last week. Marsh Harbour was the base of operations for our pulsed subsidies research, and we have numerous friends and colleagues there. We’ve been able to learn that most of the people we know personally are shaken but okay, but fear that losses will continue to mount as the recovery efforts go forward. Marsh Harbour is a small town, and the damage we’ve seen in photos and videos is devastating. There are lots of ways to help – here is one:

https://www.redcross.org/donate/hurricane-dorian-donations.html/