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  • 2012 (1)

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  • Doctoral Thesis (1)

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Keywords

  • Herbivor-Parasitoid Interaktion (1)
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  • herbivore-parasitoid interaction (1)
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  • ribwort plantain (1)
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Author

  • Hancock, Christine [geb. Herbst] (1)

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  • Theodor-Boveri-Institut für Biowissenschaften (1)

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Influence of land use on Plantago lanceolata L. and its higher trophic levels at different spatial scales and in three geographic regions (2012)
Hancock, Christine [geb. Herbst]
Nowadays, agriculturally used areas form a major part of the German landscape. The conversion from natural habitats to agriculturally used grasslands fundamentally influences the diversity of plants and animals. Intensive use of these areas increases indeed the productivity of crop or biomass on meadows as food source for cattle. How these influences affect biodiversity, ecosystems and trophic interactions over years is still not understood completely. To understand biodiversity functions in an agriculturally used area my study focused on the influence of land use (fertilization, grazing and mowing) on a herbivore-parasitoid system of Plantago lanceolata. The ribwort plantain is a generalist herb of cosmopolitan distribution. It can grow in a very broad range of ground conditions (both in wet and dry habitats), which makes P. lanceolata an ideal model system for investigating tritrophic interactions in a gradient of land use intensity. The weevils Mecinus labilis and M. pascuorum feed and oviposit on P. lanceolata. Mesopolobus incultus is a generalist parasitoid that parasitizes different insect orders. However its only hosts on P. lanceolata are the two weevil species mentioned before. The intention of my study was to investigate the influence of land use on a tritrophic system and its surrounding vegetation (structure, density and species richness) at different spatial scales like subplot, plot and landscape level in three different regions (north, middle and south of Germany). I studied the influence of land use intensity not only correlative but also experimentally. Additionally I aimed to reveal how vegetation composition changes host plant metabolites and whether these changes impact higher trophic levels in the field.
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