Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Bacteria and Competing Herbivores Weaken Top–Down and Bottom–Up Aphid Suppression

Carmen K. Blubaugh, Lynne Carpenter‐Boggs, John P. Reganold, Robert N. Schaeffer, William E. Snyder

Frontiers in Plant Science · 2018

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Summary

spp. bacteria correlated with higher aphid growth, although this appeared to be a direct effect, as aphid parasitism was not associated with this group of bacteria. Non-pathogenic soil bacteria are often shown to deliver benefits to plants, improving plant nutrition and the deployment of anti-herbivore defenses. However, our results suggest that these plant growth-promoting bacteria may also indirectly weaken top-down aphid suppression by parasitoids and directly improve aphid performance. Against a background of varying soil fertility, microbial biodiversity, competing herbivores, and natural enemies, we found that effects of non-pathogenic soil microbes on aphid growth outweighed those of nutritional factors. Therefore, predictions about the strength of plant defenses along resource grad

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.3389/fpls.2018.01239
Catalogue ID
BFmokjo5hf-ku0tvn
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