2017 ESA Annual Meeting (August 6 -- 11)

COS 92-9 - Non-target effects of biological control: Sensitivity and exposure of Senecio triangularis (Asteraceae) to timing and intensity of Tyria jacobaeae (Lepidoptera: Erebidae) herbivory

Wednesday, August 9, 2017: 10:50 AM
E141, Oregon Convention Center
Madison G. Rodman and Peter B. McEvoy, Botany and Plant Pathology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR
Background/Question/Methods

Non-target effects are one of the greatest potential risks of weed biological control programs, and understanding non-target effects of biological control at the population level is crucial for predicting when they will occur and altering the perception of biological control as a whole. In this study, we assessed the ecological risk of Tyria jacobaeae L. (Lepidoptera: Erebidae), the cinnabar moth, to Senecio triangularis Hook. (Asteraceae) in Western Oregon using a standard risk model that defines risk as the product of the hazard and the exposure to the risk (risk = hazard × exposure). We used a two-year manipulative experiment, observational regional data from twenty sites and sixteen years, and data from a six-year demographic study to characterize the risk of this interaction.

Results/Conclusions

Experimental manipulation of the timing of herbivory by cinnabar moth larvae revealed S. triangularis was sensitive to a match in phenology in year t between late instar larvae and capitula (flower heads) in early developmental stages. However, S. triangularis survival, growth, and reproduction in year t+1 were relatively insensitive to different timings and intensities of herbivory in year t. A decade of observational data of populations of S. triangularis in Western Oregon showed a balance between cinnabar moth colonization and extinction and that the intensity of cinnabar herbivory appears to be stable. Across all colonized sites and years sampled, about half of all sampled ramets (individuals of a clone, or genet) were attacked by cinnabar moth larvae and damage was generally moderate (if attacked, conditional mean = 49%, conditional median = 40% leaf area removed per ramet). Lastly, a six-year demographic study showed a fluctuating herbivore regime where marked S. triangularis genets experienced up to four years of herbivory greater than or equal to 75% leaf area removed. Together, our results support conclusions that T. jacobaeae poses a low to moderate risk to S. triangularis with the potential for this risk to change with changes in phenology and/or climate.