COS 112-5
Trophic cascades in a cranberry marsh: Can detritus-removal improve biological control?
Results/Conclusions Detritivore populations rapidly declined following both flood and spray treatments, and did not recover. Spider populations in the flooded beds rose markedly by week-2 and stayed significantly higher than the populations in sprayed beds. Spiders commonly prey on detritivores, and low observed detritivore densities throughout the summer suggest that spiders may have continued feeding on them. Further, the differences in detritivore numbers between the flood and spray treatments may have been dampened by spider predation. Parasitoids targeting moth pests were also higher in the flooded beds. Populations of the three main moth cranberry pests were the same in flooded as in sprayed beds. Flooding, therefore, supports spider and parasitoid populations that, together, reduce both detritivore and herbivore populations. These results provide evidence that a cultural control method, such as removal of detritus, has early-season effects on the trophic dynamics of the arthropod community, and that these changes in turn affect the ability of natural enemies to suppress pest populations. Alongside the theoretical implications in food web ecology, these findings provide evidence for the importance of biological control in Wisconsin cranberry production, suggesting that managing the marsh to support predator populations may be a valuable tool in cranberry pest control.