Plant carbohydrate content limits performance and lipid accumulation of an outbreaking herbivore |
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Authors: | Stav Talal Arianne J. Cease Jacob P. Youngblood Ruth Farington Eduardo V. Trumper Hector E. Medina Julio E. Rojas A. Fernando Copa Jon F. Harrison |
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Affiliation: | 1.School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 427 E Tyler Mall, Tempe, AZ 85281, USA;2.School of Sustainability, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA;3.Instituto Nacinal de Tecnología Agropecuaria, Manfredi, Argentina;4.Dirección de Sanidad Vegetal - SENASA, Argentina;5.Departamento de Campañas Fitosanitarias, Dirección de Protección Vegetal, SENAVE, Paraguay;6.Universidad Autónoma Gabriel René Moreno, Santa Cruz, Bolivia |
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Abstract: | Locusts are major intermittent threats to food security and the ecological factors determining where and when these occur remain poorly understood. For many herbivores, obtaining adequate protein from plants is a key challenge. We tested how the dietary protein : non-structural carbohydrate ratio (p : c) affects the developmental and physiological performance of 4th-5th instar nymphs of the South American locust, Schistocerca cancellata, which has recently resurged in Argentina, Bolivia and Paraguay. Field marching locusts preferred to feed on high carbohydrate foods. Field-collected juveniles transferred to the laboratory selected artificial diets or local plants with low p : c. On single artificial diets, survival rate increased as foods became more carbohydrate-biased. On single local plants, growth only occurred on the plant with the lowest p : c. Most local plants had p : c ratios substantially higher than optimal, demonstrating that field marching locusts must search for adequate carbohydrate or their survival and growth will be carbohydrate-limited. Total body lipids increased as dietary p : c decreased on both artificial and plant diets, and the low lipid contents of field-collected nymphs suggest that obtaining adequate carbohydrate may pose a strong limitation on migration for S. cancellata. Anthropogenic influences such as conversions of forests to pastures, may increase carbohydrate availability and promote outbreaks and migration of some locusts. |
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Keywords: | range expansion locust outbreaks herbivores migration macronutrients nutritional ecology |
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