2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2311.2009.01156.x
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Effects of alternative food on cannibalism and herbivore suppression by carabid larvae

Abstract: 1. Predator and alternative food density are important factors influencing herbivore suppression by generalist predators. Herbivore suppression can be reduced if predators forage preferentially on alternative foods. Cannibalism can increase at high predator densities, further reducing herbivore suppression. However, complex interactions are possible, as alternative food can increase predator abundance and survival restoring top-down effects on herbivores.2. In two species of carabid larvae (Poecilus chalcites … Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 64 publications
(124 reference statements)
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“…Besides, seasonal population fluctuations (Honek et al 2006), phenological changes in predators life cycle (e.g., overwintering stages, breeding season, dispersal etc. ), biotic factors such as high-level trophic interactions (Davis & Raghu 2010), the presence of alternative food sources (Frank et al 2010(Frank et al , 2011, abiotic factors such as temperature , seed distribution patterns on the soil surface (Noroozi et al 2012), and the method of seed exposure in the field (Shuler et al 2008;Saska et al 2014) can be attributed to levels of weed seed predation in the field.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Besides, seasonal population fluctuations (Honek et al 2006), phenological changes in predators life cycle (e.g., overwintering stages, breeding season, dispersal etc. ), biotic factors such as high-level trophic interactions (Davis & Raghu 2010), the presence of alternative food sources (Frank et al 2010(Frank et al , 2011, abiotic factors such as temperature , seed distribution patterns on the soil surface (Noroozi et al 2012), and the method of seed exposure in the field (Shuler et al 2008;Saska et al 2014) can be attributed to levels of weed seed predation in the field.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is also possible that the sentinel weed seeds in our field trials during August and September may have reduced predation in our other trials with belowground O. sulcatus larvae. Other carabid species have been shown to feed less on insect prey when grass seeds are present (Frank et al 2010(Frank et al , 2011.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…9 week 9 year F 2,519 = 9.3, P \ 0.001 year F 2,75 = 6.9, P = 0.002, week 9 year F 1,75 = 3.9, P = 0.053, treat. 9 week 9 year F 2,75 = 2.7, P = 0.076 (Thomas et al 2009;Frank et al 2010). In our study, few carabid larvae were collected from soil samples or in pitfall traps to study their potential impact.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cannibalism is pervasive amongst arthropods, including carnivorous (Elgar, 1992) and non-carnivorous taxa (Richardson et al, 2010), and it can be the result of a variety of density-dependent and independent factors (Fox, 1975;Polis, 1981;Richardson et al, 2010). Cannibalism by natural enemies may be increased when prey abundance is reduced or low in quality (Hironori & Katsuhiro, 1997;Snyder et al, 2000;Denno et al, 2004;Moreno-Ripoll et al, 2012) and is ameliorated by alternative foods, including PPFs (Cottrell & Yeargan, 1998;Leon-Beck & Coll, 2007;Frank et al, 2010). Arthropod carrion had mixed effects on egg cannibalism by J. wickhami: at low adult densities, egg cannibalism was infrequent and did not decrease when carrion was present.…”
Section: Figmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By providing food resources, plants may satiate natural enemies and decrease consumption of herbivores (Cottrell & Yeargan, 1998;Stenberg et al, 2011). Alternatively, satiation may reduce cannibalism (Leon-Beck & Coll, 2007;Frank et al, 2010), an important factor contributing to natural enemy population dynamics (Fox, 1975;Polis et al, 1989). Whether arthropod carrion, entrapped on plants, functions similarly to any of the previously mentioned mechanisms is unknown; thus far authors have postulated that carrion either attracts or retains predators on the plants (Krimmel & Pearse, 2013;LoPresti et al, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%