Abstract
Fungus-induced galls can attract spore-feeding arthropods as well as gall-feeding ones, resulting in diverse communities. Do large fungal galls support more abundant and diverse arthropod communities than small fungal galls? To address this question, we investigated the structure of the arthropod community associated with bud galls induced by the fungus Melanopsichium onumae on the tree species Cinnamomum yabunikkei (Lauraceae) in central Japan. Thirteen species of arthropods were associated with M. onumae galls. Dominant arthropod species were represented by the larvae of a salpingid beetle (a spore feeder), a nitidulid beetle (a spore feeder), a cosmopterigid moth (a spore feeder), an unidentified moth (a gall tissue feeder), and a drosophilid species (a gall tissue feeder). Arthropod abundance and species richness were positively correlated with gall diameter. The majority of the most abundant species were more frequently found in large galls than in small ones, indicating that large fungal galls, which have more food and/or space for arthropods, could support a more abundant and diverse arthropod community.
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Acknowledgments
We thank M. Hasegawa, H. Masuya, H. Yoshitomi and Y. Yamaura for their helpful advice on this research. The experiments also complied with the current laws of Japan.
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Funamoto, D., Sugiura, S. Arthropods associated with fungal galls: do large galls support more abundant and diverse inhabitants?. Sci Nat 104, 6 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00114-016-1426-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00114-016-1426-4