Artículos de revistas
Beneficial effects of flower-dwelling predators on their host plant
Registro en:
Ecology. Ecological Soc Amer, v. 85, n. 2, n. 446, n. 457, 2004.
0012-9658
WOS:000220108700015
10.1890/02-0327
Autor
Romero, GQ
Vasconcellos-Neto, J
Institución
Resumen
We examined the effects of the sit-and-wait spider Misumenops argenteus (Thomisidae) on the herbivore assemblage and fitness of the perennial woody shrub Trichogoniopsis adenantha (Asteraceae). Because crab spiders prey on both pollinators and phytophagous insects, they can have potentially negative and positive effects on plants. In a manipulative experiment using paired plants, spiders decreased the density of sucking and some endophagous herbivores on the leaves and capitula and reduced the number of damaged achenes produced by the plants. Damaged capitula had a higher proportion of fertilized achenes in plants with spiders than without spiders, but not undamaged capitula. These results indicate that M. argenteus exerted a double positive effect on seed production in T. adenantha. The effect of M. argenteus on herbivores may be taxon specific and vary among years with different herbivore abundances. 85 2 446 457