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Aphid individual performance may not predict population responses to elevated CO2 or O3

TLDR
Investigation of the impacts of elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) and ozone (O3) on the performance of the aphid Cepegillettea betulaefoliae Granovsky found individual performance did not predict population responses to CO2 and O3 and elevated CO2and O3 atmospheres are unlikely to affect populations in the presence of natural enemy communities.
Abstract
Changes in atmospheric composition affect plant quality and herbivore performance. We used the Aspen Free Air CO2 Enrichment (FACE) facility to investigate the impacts of elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) and ozone (O3) on the performance of the aphid Cepegillettea betulaefoliae Granovsky feeding on paper birch (Betula papyrifera Marsh.). In Year 1, we simultaneously measured individual performance and population growth rates, and in Year 2 we surveyed natural aphid, predator and parasitoid populations throughout the growing season. Aphid growth and development (relative growth rate (RGR), development time, adult weight, embryo number and the birth weight of newborn nymphs) were unaffected by CO2 and O3. Aphid fecundity decreased on trees grown at elevated CO2 ,O 3 and CO2 1O3. Neither nymphal performance nor adult size were reliable indicators of future fecundity at elevated CO2 and/or O3. Aphid populations protected from natural enemies were unaffected by elevated CO2, but increased significantly at elevated O3. Individual fecundity in elevated CO2 and O3 atmospheres did not predict population growth rates, probably because of changes in the strength of intraspecific competition or the ability of the aphids to induce nutrient sinks. Natural aphid, predator and parasitoids populations (Year 2) showed few significant responses to CO2 and O3, although CO2 and O3 did affect the timing of aphid and natural enemy peak abundance. Elevated CO2 and O3 affected aphid and natural enemy populations independently: no CO2 O3 interactions were observed. We conclude that: (1) aphid individual performance did not predict population responses to CO2 and O3 and (2) elevated CO2 and O3 atmospheres are unlikely to affect C. betulaefoliae populations in the presence of natural enemy communities.

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Scaling ozone responses of forest trees to the ecosystem level in a changing climate

TL;DR: In this paper, the Aspen FACE experiment in northern Wisconsin was used to understand how an aspen/birch/maple forest ecosystem responds to long-term exposure to carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) and ozone (O 3 ), alone and in combination, from establishment onward.

Adaptation of forests and people to climate change - a global assessment report.

TL;DR: In this article, a review of recent studies of climate-forest relationships with emphasis on indications and mechanisms of change during recent decades is presented, where the authors identify and mitigate some conditions that increase vulnerability to climate change in the forest sector.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impacts of Elevated Atmospheric CO2 and O3 on Forests: Phytochemistry, Trophic Interactions, and Ecosystem Dynamics

TL;DR: The discipline of chemical ecology is fundamentally important for elucidating the impacts of humans on the health and sustainability of forest ecosystems, as many of the interactions that govern above- and below-ground community and ecosystem processes are chemically mediated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Altered genotypic and phenotypic frequencies of aphid populations under enriched CO2 and O3 atmospheres

TL;DR: Assessing numerical responses of pea aphids exhibiting a pink‐green genetic polymorphism and an environmentally determined wing polyphenism on broad bean plants under enriched CO2 and/or O3 atmospheres shows that these two greenhouse gases alter not only aphid population sizes, but also genotypic and phenotypic frequencies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of elevated O3, alone and in combination with elevated CO2, on tree leaf chemistry and insect herbivore performance: a meta‐analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of ozone alone and in combination with elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) on primary and secondary metabolites of trees and performance of insect herbivores were reviewed by means of meta-analysis.
References
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an overview of the climate system and its dynamics, including observed climate variability and change, the carbon cycle, atmospheric chemistry and greenhouse gases, and their direct and indirect effects.
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Journal ArticleDOI

Host plant quality and fecundity in herbivorous insects

TL;DR: It is concluded that host plant quality affects the fecundity of herbivorous insects at both the individual and the population scale.
Journal ArticleDOI

Growth Analysis Formulae - Their Use and Abuse1

P. J. Radford
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