Molecular assessment of food web dynamics identifies critical periods
for managing resilience in biological pest control
- Pedro Branco Leote,
- Oskar Rennstam Rubbmark,
- Michael Traugott
Pedro Branco Leote
University of Innsbruck Faculty of Biology
Corresponding Author:pnbleote@gmail.com
Author ProfileOskar Rennstam Rubbmark
University of Innsbruck Faculty of Biology
Author ProfileMichael Traugott
University of Innsbruck Faculty of Biology
Author ProfileAbstract
Food webs are not static over time, but our knowledge on their dynamics
is extremely scarce due to methodological challenges. These have imposed
significant limitations on our ability to mechanistically understand how
temporal changes affect trophic networks. Here, we address this gap
using high-throughput molecular diagnostics to measure the season-wide
dynamics of trophic interactions between invertebrate generalist
predators, pest and alternative prey in replicated cereal fields across
two years. We used the level of food web specialisation as a proxy for
predator redundancy in pest control, and hypothesized that it would hit
its minimum, and invertebrate diversity its maximum, at the middle point
of the season. Additionally, alternative prey availability was
indirectly increased by adding manure to half of each field, to test if
this would reduce specialisation. In line with our predictions, it
showed an inverse bell-shaped curve over the season, while prey, but not
predator, diversity showed an opposite trend. No significant effects of
fertilization were found on food web specialisation. Our findings
identify early and late season as the times when generalist predators
are behaviourally most constrained, pin-pointing these periods as the
ones with the lowest redundancy in pest control. Hence, molecular
trophic analyses provide unique insights into the temporal dynamics of
food webs and their properties. This allows the generation of temporal
roadmaps for when management interventions are expected to be most
effective.