Effects of biodiversity in agricultural landscapes on the protective microbiome of insects - a review



Zytynska, Sharon E ORCID: 0000-0002-0174-3303 and Meyer, Sebastian T
(2019) Effects of biodiversity in agricultural landscapes on the protective microbiome of insects - a review. ENTOMOLOGIA EXPERIMENTALIS ET APPLICATA, 167 (1). pp. 2-13.

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Abstract

Symbiotic bacteria in herbivorous insects can have strong beneficial impacts on their host's survival, including conferring resistance to natural enemies such as parasitoid wasps or pathogens, while also imposing energetic costs on the host, resulting in cost‐benefit trade‐offs. Whether these trade‐offs favour the hosting of symbionts depends on the growth environment of the herbivore. Long‐term experimental grassland studies have shown that increasing plant species richness leads to an increased diversity of associated herbivores and their natural enemies. Such a change in natural enemy diversity, related to changes in plant diversity, could also drive changes in the community of symbionts hosted by the herbivorous insects. Aphids are one model system for studying symbionts in insects, and effects of host‐plant species and diversity on aphid‐symbiont interactions have been documented. Yet, we still understand little of the mechanisms underlying such effects. We review the current state of knowledge of how biodiversity can impact aphid‐symbiont communities and the underlying drivers. Then, we discuss this in the framework of sustainable agriculture, where increased plant biodiversity, in the form of wildflower strips, is used to recruit natural enemies to crop fields for their pest control services. Although aphid symbionts have the potential to reduce biological control effectiveness through conferring protection for the host insect, we discuss how increasing plant and natural enemy biodiversity can mitigate these effects and identify future research opportunities. Understanding how to promote beneficial interactions in ecological systems can help in the development of more sustainable agricultural management strategies.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: plant diversity, multitrophic interactions, Hamiltonella, Regiella, endosymbiont, aphid, sustainable agriculture, flower strips, biological control, biocontrol
Depositing User: Symplectic Admin
Date Deposited: 02 Sep 2020 11:19
Last Modified: 18 Jan 2023 23:35
DOI: 10.1111/eea.12751
Related URLs:
URI: https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/3099674