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Dryad

Data from: Host plant phenology drives risky larval dispersal in an outbreaking insect defoliator

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Dec 02, 2024 version files 13.61 KB

Abstract

Dispersal away from natal sites allows individuals to find suitable foraging sites to complete their development and successfully reproduce. However, the decision to disperse is risky for young larval Lepidoptera because mortality rates as they move from source to sink sites are high. Factors that drive this risky dispersal behaviour in forest landscapes by early instar larvae of outbreaking defoliators such as the eastern spruce budworm are not well understood.  We assessed dispersal behaviour of young larvae in relation to resource availability in terms of spring budburst phenology of primary and secondary host species, balsam fir and black spruce, respectively. We tested whether tree species and presence of suitable feeding sites influenced dispersal away from source branches and subsequent redistribution of insects. Laboratory experiments showed that dispersal is an active behaviour during which larvae disperse away from source trees without expanded buds, regardless of species. Establishment on sink branches was highest when they possessed accessible buds and the source did not. In the field, larval dispersal was higher from black spruce than from balsam fir and larval establishment was more persistent on balsam fir. Ballooning larvae settled more readily on balsam fir than on black spruce. Under current climatic conditions, the decision to disperse occurs before budburst of either host species. In this situation, larvae dispersed preferentially away from black spruce because old needles on this species are too tough for larval mining, whereas old foliage of balsam fir can be mined for sustenance and refuge while larvae await budburst. While black spruce would be a suitable host species after its buds expand, phenological defenses drive larval dispersal away from this host plant. These findings are the first to show how risky dispersal behavior in larval Lepidoptera is facultative and is determined by local food availability.