Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-18T15:51:04.609Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A snapshot in time: composition of native primary fauna of gall wasps in Spanish contact zones with chestnut trees infested by Dryocosmus kuriphilus

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2024

Diego Gil-Tapetado*
Affiliation:
Departamento de Biodiversidad, Ecología y Evolución, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Calle José Antonio Nováis 12, 28040 Madrid, Spain Dipartimento di Scienze e Politiche Ambientali, Università Degli Studi di Milano, Via Celoria 26, 20133 Milan, Italy
Carlo Polidori
Affiliation:
Dipartimento di Scienze e Politiche Ambientali, Università Degli Studi di Milano, Via Celoria 26, 20133 Milan, Italy
Jose F. Gómez
Affiliation:
Departamento de Biodiversidad, Ecología y Evolución, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Calle José Antonio Nováis 12, 28040 Madrid, Spain
Jose Luis Nieves-Aldrey
Affiliation:
Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (CSIC), Calle José Gutiérrez Abascal 2, 28006 Madrid, Spain
*
Corresponding author: Diego Gil-Tapetado; Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

One of the most prominent problems related to biological invasions is the variation of local species composition, which often leads to ex novo interspecific interactions. Here, we explored and analysed the native species composition of gall inducers and their associated parasitoids and inquilines in Spanish areas invaded by Dryocosmus kuriphilus Yasumatsu 1951 (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae), an invasive pest of chestnut trees. After a quantitative description of these species' assemblages, we analysed through bipartite networks the level of the trophic specialisation of parasitoids and inquilines when considering either the host taxonomic identity, the host plant species or the host gall morphological type. We sampled galls of D. kuriphilus and native species of Cynipidae in different Spanish areas, including those where the exotic parasitoid Torymus sinensis Kamijo 1982 (Hymenoptera: Torymidae) had been released for D. kuriphilus biological control. The results indicate that the native parasitoids recruited by D. kuriphilus come almost exclusively from native communities on Quercus galls, except for one species from Rosa. Galls of D. kuriphilus had the second most diverse species composition; despite this species assemblage arose ex novo in less than a decade. The bipartite networks resulted more specialised when considering host plant taxa than when gall types and the host taxa were accounted. In such trophic webs, there were few parasitoid/inquiline specialist and many generalist species, which agrees with the rapid recruitment by D. kuriphilus. Higher parasitoid species richness in D. kuriphilus galls is likely due to their being a largely unexploited available resource for the native natural enemies of cynipid wasps.

Type
Research Paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

Exotic and invasive species are one of the most important drivers for biodiversity loss (Vitousek et al., Reference Vitousek, D'antonio, Loope, Rejmanek and Westbrooks1997; IPBES, 2019). The introduction of an alien species in a non-native area can produce different types of biological perturbations, such as an increased species competition, overpopulations and greater pest damages, and changes in trophic interactions (Pyšek and Richardson, Reference Pyšek and Richardson2010; Mollot et al., Reference Mollot, Pantel, Romanuk and Bohan2017). A new species established in an area is a new component in a biological system and may potentially alter interactions between native fauna and flora. These ex novo interactions can result in competition for species by a resource (Brown et al., Reference Brown, Mitchell and Graham2002; MacDougall and Turkington, Reference MacDougall and Turkington2005) or the generation of new top-down and bottom-up dynamics with the native flora and fauna (Keeler et al., Reference Keeler, Chew, Goodale and Reed2006; Strange et al., Reference Strange, Landi, Hill and Coetzee2019). An example of these new interactions is the recruitment of species, i.e. the emergence of ex novo trophic interactions among a community founder species and native taxa that exploit it as a resource (Tecco et al., Reference Tecco, Gurvich, Díaz, Pérez-Harguindeguy and Cabido2006; Matošević and Melika, Reference Matošević and Melika2013). In this case, the community founder – e.g. an invasive species – becomes a new component of food webs whose relationships with other species were not established until the time of recruitment. Hence, although exotic species are often considered more invasive when producing an economic or health damage than when producing ecosystem disturbance (Pimentel et al., Reference Pimentel, Zuniga and Morrison2005), their alterations of within-community species interactions can be detrimental (Pyšek et al., Reference Pyšek, Hulme, Simberloff, Bacher, Blackburn and Carlton2020).

On the other hand, species can be categorised according to their trophic niche width, i.e. the number of taxa or functional groups of taxa that they can consume (Bearhop et al., Reference Bearhop, Adams, Waldron, Fuller and MacLeod2004; Olsson et al., Reference Olsson, Stenroth, Nyström and Granéli2009). Thus, we can set generalists (euryphagous or with a wide trophic range) or specialists (stenophagous or with a narrow trophic range). For parasitoids and parasites, such trophic range corresponds to the host range (Askew, Reference Askew1971; Quicke, Reference Quicke1997), and because many of these organisms are trophically specialised (Futuyma and Moreno, Reference Futuyma and Moreno1988; Agosta et al., Reference Agosta, Janz and Brooks2010), it is relevant to study their recruitment patterns and specifically by invasive host species. We can hypothesise, for example, that the more generalist species are the first to be recruited and the most represented in the newly formed trophic webs and that the more specialist species will be more rarely recruited by the alien species. Here, we explored and analysed the species composition of gall inducers and their associated parasitoids and inquilines in Spanish areas invaded by Dryocosmus kuriphilus Yasumatsu 1951 (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae), an invasive galling pest of chestnut trees.

D. kuriphilus is a pest of Castanea and its galls cause important economic losses (Battisti et al., Reference Battisti, Benvegnù, Colombari and Haack2014) as well as the deterioration of the quality and vigorousness of the trees (Gehring et al., Reference Gehring, Bellosi, Reynaud and Conedera2020), leading to a serious concern on the chestnut production sector, which is already facing tree disorders such as blight or ink disease (Vannini and Vettraino, Reference Vannini and Vettraino2001; Rigling and Prospero, Reference Rigling and Prospero2018). This species belongs to the so-called gall wasps, which are secondarily herbivorous hymenopterans characterised by the induction (or in some cases the usurpation (inquilinism) (Ronquist, Reference Ronquist1994)) of particular structures on plants called galls, in which the larvae feed and develop (Nieves-Aldrey, Reference Nieves-Aldrey2001; Stone et al., Reference Stone, Schönrogge, Atkinson, Bellido and Pujade-Villar2002). Apart from inquiline cynipids, the galls are also attacked by a variety of hymenopteran parasitoid species in the superfamilies (Chalcidoidea and Ichneumonoidea), which use the host larvae to feed their own brood (Askew et al., Reference Askew, Plantard, Gómez, Nieves and Nieves-Aldrey2006, Reference Askew, Melika, Pujade-Villar, Schoenrogge, Stone and Nieves-Aldrey2013).

In the areas where it has been introduced, D. kuriphilus has recruited several native parasitoid species from the close native cynipid communities (Aebi et al., Reference Aebi, Schönrogge, Melika, Alma, Bosio, Quacchia, Picciau, Abe, Moriya, Yara, Seljak, Stone and Ozaki2006; Matošević and Melika, Reference Matošević and Melika2013; Quacchia et al., Reference Quacchia, Ferracini, Nicholls, Piazza, Saladini, Tota, Melika and Alma2013; Bonsignore et al., Reference Bonsignore, Vizzari, Vono and Bernardo2020; Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, Cabrero-Sañudo, Gómez, Askew and Nieves-Aldrey2021a). It is noteworthy that in the Western Palearctic, chestnut trees did not possess any associated or gall-inducing cynipid species. Hence, the arrival of D. kuriphilus is producing a new biological community, which has been rapidly formed through the ‘emerged islands-on-mainland effect’ (Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, Cabrero-Sañudo, Gómez, Askew and Nieves-Aldrey2021a). Together with the recruited native parasitoid species, the galls of D. kuriphilus are also attacked by Torymus sinensis Kamijo 1982 (Hymenoptera: Torymidae), which has been also introduced in many infested regions to control this pest (Quacchia et al., Reference Quacchia, Moriya, Bosio, Scapin and Alma2008; Borowiec et al., Reference Borowiec, Thaon, Brancaccio, Cailleret, Ris and Vercken2018) or has colonised areas with D. kuriphilus close to other areas where T. sinensis has been released (Nieves-Aldrey et al., Reference Nieves-Aldrey, Gil-Tapetado, Gavira, Boyero, Polidori, Lombardero, Blanco, Rey del Castillo, Rodriguez Rojo, Vela and Wong2019). This parasitoid is not only forming part of the chestnut pest communities but is engaging in new interspecific relationships with native gall wasp species (Ferracini et al., Reference Ferracini, Bertolino, Bernardo, Bonsignore, Faccoli, Ferrari, Lupi, Maini, Mazzon, Nugnes, Rocco, Santi and Tavella2017, Reference Ferracini, Bertolino, Bernardo, Bonsignore, Faccoli, Ferrari, Lupi, Maini, Mazzon, Nugnes, Rocco, Santi and Tavella2018; Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, López-Estrada, Ruiz, Cabrero-Sañudo, Gómez, Durán-Montes, Rey del Castillo, Rodríguez-Rojo, Polidori and José-Luis Nieves-Aldrey2023). Thus, the native species composition of parasitoids and inquilines associated with D. kuriphilus and with native gall wasps provides a ‘snapshot in time’ of the status of these species during the first years of establishment of an invasive species that is essentially developing an ex novo community. Previous contributions (Kos et al., Reference Kos, Kriston and Melika2015; Jara-Chiquito et al., Reference Jara-Chiquito, Askew and Pujade-Villar2020) reported a list of parasitoids found in both D. kuriphilus and native cynipid-gall communities in Slovenia and Catalonia (north-eastern Spain), respectively. Their results showed that the pest galls harbour a rich assemblage of species, often more than those found in the native wasp galls. However, these studies did not analyse the data in order to assess quantitatively how these associated faunae overlap or differ among the alien wasp and the native wasps.

Our study aims specifically to answer to the following questions: (1) which parasitoid/inquiline species have been actually recruited to date by D. kuriphilus in confluence zones with native cynipids? (2) How different is the overlap of parasitoid/inquiline diversity between D. kuriphilus and native fauna depending on the cynipid taxa/host plant taxa? (3) Is host specialisation variation across parasitoid/inquiline species of the whole cynipid assemblage mostly driven by host wasp taxa, host plant taxa, or gall morphology? and (4) Are more generalist parasitoid/inquiline species more diverse and abundant in D. kuriphilus galls than specialist ones?

Materials and methods

Study area

Field samplings were carried out from May 2016 to May 2019 in different areas of Spain: in the north, northwest (Galicia), central area (Central System), and the south (Andalucía, mainly the province of Málaga). The northern and northwestern areas are characterised by an Atlantic and temperate climate (according to Peel et al., Reference Peel, Finlayson and McMahon2007), with relatively high rainfall and mild temperatures, and with dominance of Quercus robur L. The area of the Central System is a mountain range in the centre of Spain, characterised by a milder climate than the northern and southern plateaus with their steppe climate, characterised by forests of Quercus pyrenaica Willd. The southern areas are related to humid valleys surrounded by mountain ranges with high rainfall, but with a typical Mediterranean climate, with more presence of Quercus ilex L. and Quercus suber L. than the other areas. All these areas have Castanea sativa trees and are known to be infested by D. kuriphilus (Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, Gomez, Cabrero-Sañudo and Nieves-Aldrey2018) and T. sinensis is also present there (Nieves-Aldrey et al., Reference Nieves-Aldrey, Gil-Tapetado, Gavira, Boyero, Polidori, Lombardero, Blanco, Rey del Castillo, Rodriguez Rojo, Vela and Wong2019) (table S1; fig. S1), or with a high suitability for its establishment (as is the case in the areas of Andalusia other than Málaga) (following Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, Gomez, Cabrero-Sañudo and Nieves-Aldrey2018). In addition, we selected these areas because we previously studied the parasitoid and inquiline communities associated with D. kuriphilus (Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, Cabrero-Sañudo, Gómez, Askew and Nieves-Aldrey2021a). A total of 74 sites were sampled (see table S1) in at least 2 consecutive years.

Field sampling and collection of native cynipid galls

To evaluate the composition of parasitoid and inquiline species associated with native cynipid-gall species close to infested chestnuts with D. kuriphilus, we collected all the available galls in the nearest host plants of cynipid (fig. 1). We consider both parasitoids and inquiline species, as the primary fauna associated with gall inducer cynipids because they are found during the period of the gall wasp is present inside the gall, differentiating it from the secondary fauna, which is present after the emergence of the cynipid specimen. We collected all the galls within a buffer of 250 m around a centroid of the coordinates according to Gil-Tapetado et al. (Reference Gil-Tapetado, Cabrero-Sañudo, Gómez, Askew and Nieves-Aldrey2021a) by active sampling with two collectors in approximately 1 h by site, searching known host plants for Cynipidae. The galls were collected mainly from trees of Q. robur, Quercus petraea (Matt.) Liebl., Quercus canariensis Willd., Q. pyrenaica, Quercus faginea Lam. (grouped on section Quercus), Q. ilex, Quercus coccifera L. (grouped on Q. ilex + cocc), Q. suber, and C. sativa as well as from bushes of Rosa sp. and Rubus sp., and herbaceous Asteraceae of genera Rhaponticum Ludw. (=Leuzea) and Centaurea. These galls were collected, identified at the species level, shipped, transported under cold, and sorted by species of Cynipidae and sampling date in emergency card boxes, equipped with skylight extractors, under indoor room conditions. A total of 4484 galls of native Cynipidae were collected (table S2). Adult emerged primary fauna was collected, and specimens were stored in ethanol 70% and deposited in the Entomological Collection of the Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales of Madrid (MNCN-CSIC). Cynipid-gall wasps, chalcid parasitoids, and cynipid inquilines were identified by the senior author using available taxonomic key references (De Vere Graham and Gisjwist, Reference de Vere Graham and Gijswijt1998; Nieves-Aldrey, Reference Nieves-Aldrey2001; Gómez et al., Reference Gomez, Nieves-Aldrey and Hernandez-Nieves2008) and unpublished information of Askew and Thúroczy (unpublished) and Nieves-Aldrey (unpublished).

Figure 1. Galls of sampled native cynipid species: (A) B. pallida, (B) An. curvator (sex.), (C) Andricus coriarius (asex.), (D) Andricus grossulariae (asex.), (E) An. hispanicus (asex.), (F) Andricus pictus (asex), (G) Cynips quercus (asex.), (H) Neuroterus quercusbaccarum (sex.), (I) Trigonaspis mendesi (asex), (J) Andricus quercusramuli (sex.), (K) Pl. quercusilicis (sex), (L) An. crispator (sex), (M) Diastrophus rubi, (N) Diplolepis rosae, and (O) Isocolus lichtensteini. (A), (B), (G), (H), (K), (L), (M), and (O) species are examples of simple galls; (C), (D), (E), (F), and (I) of complex lignified galls; (J) and (N) of complex hairy galls. © J.L. Nieves-Aldrey.

Composition and diversity analyses

We computed our data as a compilation of information of primary fauna species from May 2016 to May 2019, which show a temporal framework of a snapshot of species composition of Chalcidoidea and Cynipidae, but not as a biological community, because our data are not sufficiently powerful to be able to separate the assemblages among the study areas. Although we cannot consider our data as a biological community, we use strategies of community analyses to obtain information about the species composition. The raw dataset is available in the Supplementary file DataSET.xlsx.

We used the abundance data of parasitoids by host species of Cynipidae as a dataset to investigate the recent species composition of these assemblages in the studied areas. To check that our data can be analysed at the level of diversity, that the number of samplings and galls collected are sufficient, and that the samples are representative, we first estimated the sampling effort. We performed this analysis at the individual level using a species accumulation curve based on the Chao2 estimator calculated with EstimateS 9.1.0 software. Biodiversity Estimation software (Colwell, Reference Colwell2013) and the smoothened Clench curve was calculated with CurveExpert Basic 2.0 (Hyams, Reference Hyams2020). We considered the following criteria as indicators for sufficient sampling effort and good sample quality: slope <0.1, registered species percentage >70%, and realised sampling effort >70%. Species accumulation curve indicates that at this level the data are representative and have a sufficient and high sampling effort, fulfilling all the above criteria (fig. S2).

We performed analyses of species aggrupation/segregation by the host plant of the Cynipidae using different Venn diagrams. These analyses show using coincident and exclusive compartments the aggrupation and segregation of species complex considering each host plant. As we focused on D. kuriphilus, we first compared the composition of primary fauna on this species with the galls of native species that are not presented in trees in a regular Venn diagram. Second, we performed another regular Venn diagram with the species on the galls of D. kuriphilus, on Quercus, and those of the previous Venn analysis. For a better result of the aggrupation/segregation of the primary fauna for each host plant, we performed a proportional Venn diagram showing the comparative size of each compartment and the percentage that each represents of the total. These analyses were performed with the packages venn (for regular Venn diagrams; Dusa Reference Dusa2022) and eulerr (for the proportional Venn diagram; Larsson et al., Reference Larsson, Godfrey, Gustafsson, Eberly, Huber and Privé2022) in R version 4.2.2 (R Development Core Team, 2023) in RStudio 2022.12.0+353 ‘Elsbeth Geranium’ (RStudio Team, 2022). We performed an additional non-metric multidimensional scaling analysis to observe the similarity among the composition of species based on host plants. These similarities are based on Bray–Curtis distances among the groups. This analysis was performed with the package vegan (Dixon, Reference Dixon2003) in RStudio.

To perform the analyses detailed below, we selected only host species of Cynipidae with a representation of collected galls (>30), emerged species (>6), and individuals (>20) of parasitoids and inquilines; we can consider them as common host species and with an abundant and diverse primary fauna at least in our study areas and sampling period. To calculate the total diversity of species, we used the true diversity indices (Jost, Reference Jost2006), obtaining the values of observed (q 0), effective species (q 1), and dominant species richness (q 2). For this purpose, we use the package SpadeR (Chao et al., Reference Chao, Ma, Hsieh and Chiu2016) in RStudio.

Bipartite network analyses

We tested the relationships among the species compositions through bipartite food webs using three different categories: host species (taxonomy), plant host species, and gall morphological type (the latter being functional ecology traits). The type of the morphology and structure of the galls was categorised following Gil-Tapetado et al. (Reference Gil-Tapetado, Durán-Montes, García-París, López-Estrada, Sánchez-Vialas, Jiménez-Ruiz, Gómez and Nieves-Aldrey2022), but separating complex galls into two categories, those with a large, spherical shape or with rigid extensions, lignified structure (lignified) and those with a cottony shape or a spiky ball (hairy) (see fig. 1). For this categorisation, we also considered and adapted the proposed character states of Stone and Cook (Reference Stone and Cook1998). Thus, we created three different networks based on the three above-mentioned traits: host taxa, plant taxa, and gall type. Hereafter, we refer to these three networks, respectively, as HT-web, PT-web, and GS-web.

We obtained different parameters for each network. Among the network-level parameters, we calculated complementary specialisation (H 2′), nestedness (which describes a network topology in which the interactions of the more specialised nodes are subsets of the interactions made by the more generalised nodes) (NODF), and linkage density (diversity of interactions per species). Among the group-level parameters (i.e. for lower (LL) and higher trophic level (HL)), we calculated the niche overlap and the togetherness (the mean number of co-occurrences across all pairwise species combinations). We then generated random food webs and compared their calculated indices with the empirical ones through null models based on random permutations.

At the species level, we calculated the specialisation (d′) for each parasitoid/inquiline species in each of the three created networks, and we compared it across networks both using an analysis of variance (ANOVA) and ranking the species by increasing specialisation.

Specialisation, both at network-level and species-level analysis, may suggest which cues are important to guide the parasitoids/inquilines while searching for/detecting a host. For example, if specialisation is higher in the HT-web, we may suggest that the gall volatiles are more important that the plant volatiles and the gall type while searching for a host. On the contrary, specialisation would be higher in the PT-web likely if plant volatiles are relevant, and specialisation would be higher in the GS-web likely if visual cues are important for host detection. All these analyses and the display of the food webs were performed with the package bipartite (Dormann et al., Reference Dormann, Fruend, Gruber and Dormann2014) in RStudio.

Results

Composition and diversity analyses

We collected a total of 25,277 galls of D. kuriphilus on Castanea and 4484 galls of native cynipid species, from which 4258 on Quercus species (42 species of Cynipidae), and 5047 specimens of parasitoids and inquilines (3792 and 1,255, respectively) of 76 different species (64 and 15 respectively) (see DataSET.xlsx). Out of the parasitoid species, we have obtained representatives of the following families of Chalcidoidea: 16 species belonging to Eulophidae, 5 to Eupelmidae, 11 to Eurytomidae, 2 to Megastigmidae, 2 to Ormyridae, 16 to Pteromalidae, 13 to Torymidae, and 1 species of Ichneumonidae (Ichneumonoidea) (perhaps as part of a secondary community in the galls of Cynipidae that does not parasitise the galling wasp). Of the Cynipidae inquiline species, we have obtained 14 species belonging to Synergini and 1 to Diastrophini. Of the host species of Cynipidae, we obtained 1 species from C. sativa (D. kuriphilus); 26 from section Quercus; 4 from Q. suber, Q. ilex, and Q. coccifera; 4 from Rosa, 1 from Rubus, and 3 from Asteraceae species.

Segregation analyses showed that D. kuriphilus did not share any parasitoid or inquiline species with gall-inducing cynipids on Asteraceae or Rubus, except for two species from Rosa (fig. 2A), namely Eurytoma setigera Mayr 1878 and Eupelmus urozonus Dalman 1820. For this reason, we have included the composition of Rosa's primary fauna in the segregation analyses with Quercus and Castanea. This analysis indicated a single species exclusive from galls on Castanea (fig. 2B), namely Pachyneuron concolor (Förster 1841), while the rest of the species has been recruited from other biological communities. This result indicated that there were both specialist and generalist species considering the host plant taxa for each cynipid-gall species, showing that there were both exclusive species from each one and species that attack galls on different host plants, as is the case of E. urozonus. Considering the proportionality of sharing species, the fauna of D. kuriphilus was almost entirely recruited from Quercus communities and marginally from Rosa (fig. 2C), indicating that was immersed in the native parasitoid and inquiline assemblages of gall inducer cynipids. The primary fauna belonging to section Quercus is the most recruited species by D. kuriphilus, being 8 species coming only from this host plant (~13%), 14 species (~23%) were also shared with other Quercus hosts. The section Quercus also had the richest exclusive primary fauna (21 species, ~33%). However, the compositions of species most similar to D. kuriphilus were the Q. ilex and Q. coccifera groups (52.38%; table 1). The plant categories also showed a similar percentage of exclusive species and shared species (~46 vs. ~54%, respectively), being section Quercus and Rosa (7 species, 11%) the categories with most exclusive species. The most different group of species was Rosa (table 1), while the Castanea and all Quercus constituted a unique group (fig. S2).

Figure 2. Segregation Venn analysis of parasitoid and inquiline species that we have found in our samplings in different host plants comparing with those founded on D. kuriphilus on Castanea: (A) herbaceous (Asteraceae) and bushes (Rosa and Rubus). (B) trees (Quercus), categorised in section Quercus (Q. robur, Q. petraea, Q. canariensis, Q. pyrenaica, and Q. faginea), Q. ilex + cocc (Q. ilex and Q. coccifera), and Q. suber. We also included parasitoids and inquilines on Rosa due to the sharing species it has with D. kuriphilus. (C) Proportional Venn analysis showing the numbers and percentages of species that share and are exclusive to each host plant category. For a better interpretation of the figure, the percentage values are rounded. *The exclusive species of D. kuriphilus, Pa. concolor, is a parasitoid of the secondary fauna inhabiting the galls of D. kuriphilus and does not really represent a trophic relationship with this cynipid.

Table 1. Bray–Curtis' similarity (in percentage) among the primary fauna of each five categories of the host plant

Among the host species, which we selected and that fulfil the requirements (see above) (fig. 3, table S3), the species with the richest primary fauna was Biorhiza pallida, followed by D. kuriphilus. This indicates that this alien species is the second most species-diverse among the common hosts of parasitoids and inquiline of cynipid galls. The other top five species with the total richness were Andricus hispanicus, Plagiotrochus quercusilicis, and Plagiotrochus australis, the last two in Q. ilex and Q. coccifera. D. kuriphilus had a 41.87% of effective species and a 27.40% of dominant species, being a host with a large complex of accessory species (58.12%), as also were B. pallida, An. Hispanicus, or Pl. quercusilicis. The host species with less dominant richness was Andricus crispator in Q. suber, which had a species composition dominated by the newly described species Mesopolobus delafuentei Nieves-Aldrey and Askew 2020. Curiously, we have only found M. delafuentei in the south of the Iberian Peninsula (Málaga) and not in the galls of An. crispator in other territories such as Galicia (Nieves-Aldrey et al., Reference Nieves-Aldrey, Gil-Tapetado and Askew2020).

Figure 3. True diversity of primary fauna by host species of Cynipidae with a representation of collected galls (>30), emerged species (>6), and individuals (>20) of parasitoids and inquilines. Colours denote each host plant category. Light tones represent the value of total species richness (q 0); medium tones, the effective species (q 1); and dark tones, the dominant species (q 2). *Andricus burgundus is a cryptic species complex formed by different bisexual generations of species of Andricus in Q. suber with a quite similar morphology.

Network analyses

The three types of food webs (HT-web, PT-web, and GS-web) showed different topologies, having the highest number of nodes and links for the HT-web and the lowest values for the GS-web (fig. 4). There were significant differences in all the considered network parameters for the network types, except in the case of the NODF in the GS-web, in comparison with the random networks (table 2). By comparing the parameters among network types (table 2), we have found that the GS-web has greater linkage density, niche overlap, and togetherness. On the other hand, the PT-web showed intermediate values except for H 2′ and NODF, which had the highest values in this web, together with the lowest niche overlap of the lower trophic level.

Figure 4. Food webs performed with three different categorisations of the lower level: host species (left, in blue), host plant of the Cynipidae (centre, in green), and the type of the gall induced by the host species (right, in red).

Table 2. Values of the network parameters, considering three different traits: the host species of Cynipidae, the host plant of the host species, and the gall type of the hosts

We calculated complementary specialisation (H 2′), nestedness (which describes a network topology in which the interactions of the more specialised nodes are subsets of the interactions made by the more generalised nodes) (NODF) and linkage density (diversity of interactions per species). Among the group-level parameters (i.e. for lower (LL) and higher trophic level (HL)), we calculated the niche overlap and the togetherness (the mean number of co-occurrences across all pairwise species combinations). We generated food webs at random, comparing their calculated values with the empirical ones through null models based on random permutations.

**>0.01, ***>0.001.

The species-level specialisation (d′) of the parasitoids/inquilines was highest, on average, in the HT-web and lowest in the GS-web (fig. 5A). However, the d′ values' distribution indicates that in the HT-web there was a similar number of specialists and generalists, while the GS-web harboured many generalist species and few specialised ones. The PT-web showed intermediate values of d′. The most specialised species is M. delafuentei in galls of An. crispator, and eight species associated with gall on Rosa (Diplolepis), following to Aulogymnus arsames (Walker 1838) and T. sinensis. On the other hand, the most generalist species were Eurytoma brunniventris Ratzeburg 1852, Hyssopus pallidus (Askew 1964), Mesopolobus mediterraneus (Mayr 1903), Mesopolobus sericeus (Förster 1770), Torymus flavipes, E. urozonus, and Torymus auratus (fig. 5B).

Figure 5. (A) Violin diagrams with the comparison between the d′ (individual specialisation) of the primary fauna of Cynipidae by each category. ANOVA test, F = 28.73, P < 0.00001. (B) Ranking of primary fauna species with the sum of d′ of each category, indicating a gradient of generalist and specialist species. Dots mark the primary fauna associated with D. kuriphilus studied in this article (data of samplings of Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, Cabrero-Sañudo, Gómez, Askew and Nieves-Aldrey2021a) and cross mark the primary fauna associated with this host detected in the Iberian Peninsula (data compilation of Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, Cabrero-Sañudo, Gómez, Askew and Nieves-Aldrey2021a).

Discussion

The snapshot of the species composition

Our results reflect the species compositions of Cynipidae and their primary fauna in areas infested by D. kuriphilus from mid-2016 to mid-2019 in the Iberian Peninsula and other adjacent areas. This time is not the initial period of the biological invasion of D. kuriphilus in the study areas (Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, Gomez, Cabrero-Sañudo and Nieves-Aldrey2018, Reference Gil-Tapetado, Castedo-Dorado, Lombardero, Martel and Álvarez-Álvarez2021b), but it represents the term when such ex novo biological community, recruited by this alien species in Castanea, appeared. The formation of new biological communities is a complicated process to observe, since in natural environments native species have been coexisting with each other for millions of years (Cody et al., Reference Cody, MacArthur and Diamond1975; Thompson, Reference Thompson1999). However, we can observe the formation of new communities after a biological invasion since this appears in a much shorter time. In the case of D. kuriphilus, we are not only observing how new interactions are created between species that had never interacted a priori, but we are observing how multiple species are recruited by a founder species, giving birth to an assemblage of species which European chestnut trees did not account before (Askew et al., Reference Askew, Melika, Pujade-Villar, Schoenrogge, Stone and Nieves-Aldrey2013). From this point of view, it is striking that D. kuriphilus is the second most parasitised species and the second having most species-rich primary fauna, after the native species on Q. ilex and Q. coccifera and the section Quercus. The primary fauna associated with D. kuriphilus resulted in fully nested within the communities of native cynipids, and additionally T. sinensis – the alien biological control agent of this pest – has not been found as a parasitoid of native Cynipidae.

The paradigmatic result that D. kuriphilus, the last species to be established in the study area (and in Europe as a whole), has one of the richest primary faunal assemblages among Cynipidae, outcompeting all native species except for B. pallida, has been addressed in previous studies (Kos et al., Reference Kos, Kriston and Melika2015; Jara-Chiquito et al., Reference Jara-Chiquito, Askew and Pujade-Villar2020). Here, we also analysed in a quantitative and detailed way, such pattern of host use.

The very rich assemblages found in D. kuriphilus galls is likely since they represent new resources to be exploited, and the species (parasitoids and inquilines) that can potentially use them as resources were already part of biological communities located very close. On the one hand, chestnut trees and Quercus are both part of the hardwood forests of the Mediterranean regions (Pividori et al., Reference Pividori, Giannetti, Barbati and Chirici2016), while chestnut trees are also cultivated near of oak stands. In this primary fauna recruitment, the landscape and the composition of tree species have been very relevant, since the close disposition between the galls that were already resources for parasitoids and inquilines, have found a new unexploded resource in the nearby chestnut trees when have been infested by D. kuriphilus. In an alternative theoretical scenario in which there were not oak trees nearby, recruitment of native primary fauna would not have been possible and only T. sinensis would have been present due to releases. On the other hand, according to our species composition results, there are more parasitoids with a wide host range (i.e. generalists), than specialists. Parasitoids and inquilines of galls on Rosa are less recruited by D. kuriphilus, showing the most different composition and almost all are the most specialised species. Also, the galls of D. kuriphilus and B. pallida, together with others, such as Pl. quercusilicis, Pl. australis (in Q. ilex and Q. coccifera), and Andricus curvator (also B. pallida, both in section Quercus), have similar traits, being simple, without defence structures, multilocular, and usually aggregated, unlike other Cynipidae galls (Stone and Schönrogge, Reference Stone and Schönrogge2003). These galls do not seem to have a specific defence to avoid parasitism, but rather they seem to have an aggregation strategy, based on both the multilocularity of their galls, the joint arrangement of many of them, and the production of numerous offspring. This, together with the strategy of empty larval chambers (Cooper and Rieske, Reference Cooper and Rieske2010), means that despite not having a physical strategy against parasitism, the mortality is distributed among the population (i.e. they are easier to parasitise, but they are numerous). These statements coincide with the ‘emerged islands-on-mainland effect’ (Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, Cabrero-Sañudo, Gómez, Askew and Nieves-Aldrey2021a), which explains the rapid recruitment of species by D. kuriphilus.

The exclusive species in the composition of D. kuriphilus, Pa. concolor, is a hyperparasitoid of other parasitoids of Encyrtidae related to Coccidae or Aphididae (Hemiptera) (Noyes, Reference Noyes2019), species that can cohabit between or inside the cynipid galls, therefore, although we have found it inside the galls of D. kuriphilus, it does not have a direct relationship with this cynipid and is not part of the primary fauna but belongs to the secondary fauna. Also, H. pallidus is an occasional, rare, and marginal species in the oak gall-wasp communities, and which is associated with Cecidomyiidae (Diptera) and Tortricidae (Lepidoptera) (Noyes, Reference Noyes2019). The presence of H. pallidus in our samplings seems to be due to chance, and the results related to this species should not be taken into consideration in the context of species specialisation.

In previous contributions, higher parasitoid activity and richness has been reported mostly in warmer and Mediterranean areas than colder or temperate ones (Bonsignore et al., Reference Bonsignore, Vono and Bernardo2019; Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, Cabrero-Sañudo, Gómez, Askew and Nieves-Aldrey2021a, Reference Gil-Tapetado, Castedo-Dorado, Nieves-Aldrey and Lombardero2021c). In this article we have not compared the possible differences between the biological communities of cynipids in Castanea and Quercus in the three areas sampled, although we had previously focused on the variability of the communities of D. kuriphilus in the north-western (Galicia) and southern (Andalusia) regions of the Iberian Peninsula (Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, Cabrero-Sañudo, Gómez, Askew and Nieves-Aldrey2021a). Future research on how cynipid-gall communities in Quercus and Castanea might vary along a temperature gradient would further explore these questions.

Specialisation of parasitoids

Most of the native recruited species by D. kuriphilus are considered generalist taxa (Askew et al., Reference Askew, Melika, Pujade-Villar, Schoenrogge, Stone and Nieves-Aldrey2013; Noyes, Reference Noyes2019; Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, Cabrero-Sañudo, Gómez, Askew and Nieves-Aldrey2021a). It has even been reported that in the first year of introduction of D. kuriphilus in a new area there is usually recruitment of generalist parasitoids (Pérez-Otero et al., Reference Pérez-Otero, Crespo and Vázquez2017; Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, Rodríguez-Rojo, Valderas and Nieves-Aldrey2020). This coincides with the idea that the first parasitoids to be recruited to D. kuriphilus are those that have a wider host range and are more opportunistic, and in successive years, other species with a narrower host range are incorporated into the species composition. Following this idea, the more specialist native species would be the last to be recruited because their host range is the narrowest, and only if the galls of D. kuriphilus fulfil the characteristics of its host selection, they can incorporate them as a new resource. Thus, there would be a succession of parasitoid recruitment not due to the distance between resources (galls are very close to each other, since chestnut and oak form common forests), but due to the host range of the recruited species. Inquiline species of the cynipid galls tend to have a narrower and more specific range of gall and host plant than parasitoids. This is due to the physiological specificity of inquilines towards the cynipid species they attack, occupying their galls, producing new larval chambers within them or even producing secondary induction in the gall (Nieves-Aldrey, Reference Nieves-Aldrey2001; Gobbo et al., Reference Gobbo, Lartillot, Hearn, Stone, Abe, Wheat and Ronquist2020). It is to be expected that more specialist inquilines will not become part of the primary faunal composition of D. kuriphilus, at least in the short-to-medium term, as a priori the indigenous inquilines do not possess the modifying mechanisms for the galls of this invasive species. Furthermore, only the more generalist inquilines and those, which do not exhibit gall induction or modification responses, will be recruited by D. kuriphilus. Analyses by network type suggest that the primary fauna studied are likely to use gall morphological type and host plant volatiles rather than traits (e.g. odour) associated with the host cynipid taxa. However, we also found that specialisation was greatest in the network with host taxa at the lower trophic level. This may suggest that parasitoids/inquilines first use plant volatiles to detect host plants (Turlings and Benrey, Reference Turlings and Benrey1998), then approach preferred galls depending on their type (Tumlinson et al., Reference Tumlinson, Lewis and Vet1993; Lucchetta et al., Reference Lucchetta, Bernstein, Théry, Lazzari and Desouhant2008), and then continue and finally select the cynipid host species at a closer distance. Following this observation, the identity of the host species seems to be the least relevant trait during host searching, except for a few species with high specialisation towards a host(s) (e.g. M. delafuentei with An. crispator) (Nieves-Aldrey et al., Reference Nieves-Aldrey, Gil-Tapetado and Askew2020). This suggests that in the most cases there is no taxonomic specialisation but ecological or functional specialisation of the primary fauna. There are examples of parasitoid–host networks, which suggest similar results to those found by us. For example, mutillid wasps (Mutillidae) seem to be rather generalist at the host taxon level, but each species seems to be specialised to attack bee and wasp hosts sharing certain ecological traits (nest type, social behaviour) (Ronchetti and Polidori, Reference Ronchetti and Polidori2020).

Here, T. sinensis appear as a high specialised species because we only detected this species in galls of D. kuriphilus in the wild. However, in other studies T. sinensis has been detected parasitising native galls, both in laboratory trials and in the field (Ferracini et al., Reference Ferracini, Bertolino, Bernardo, Bonsignore, Faccoli, Ferrari, Lupi, Maini, Mazzon, Nugnes, Rocco, Santi and Tavella2017; Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, López-Estrada, Ruiz, Cabrero-Sañudo, Gómez, Durán-Montes, Rey del Castillo, Rodríguez-Rojo, Polidori and José-Luis Nieves-Aldrey2023). The galls of native Cynipidae in which T. sinensis has been detected are those that have a similar morphology with the galls of D. kuriphilus (simple gall developing in spring, soft in appearance, and either a swelling on the leaf or an irregular ellipsoid related to the number of larval chambers it contains, e.g. An. curvator or B. pallida). Hence, also based on the attacked host gall morphological types and on previous results on the potential host range of T. sinensis (Gibbs et al., Reference Gibbs, Schönrogge, Alma, Melika, Quacchia, Stone and Aebi2011; Ferracini et al., Reference Ferracini, Bertolino, Bernardo, Bonsignore, Faccoli, Ferrari, Lupi, Maini, Mazzon, Nugnes, Rocco, Santi and Tavella2017; Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, López-Estrada, Ruiz, Cabrero-Sañudo, Gómez, Durán-Montes, Rey del Castillo, Rodríguez-Rojo, Polidori and José-Luis Nieves-Aldrey2023), it is quite possible that this alien parasitoid is an ecology-specialist species. A similar situation appeared for Au. arsames, one of the species cited as an ecology-specialist. This also suggests that, along the ecological succession of parasitoid recruitment exerted by the native species, T. sinensis would lose specialisation (d') over the years and would have a similar value to its sister species, Torymus notatus (Walker 1833). The high abundance of D. kuriphilus relative to native cynipids in the sampling areas probably results in a high availability of alien galls relative to native galls. Because of this high abundance, we believe that T. sinensis is more closely associated with D. kuriphilus than with native cynipids. However, we are not certain about what could happen in the future if the population of D. kuriphilus is eventually regulated and the availability of its galls becomes equitable to that of native galls susceptible to parasitism, such as those already reported, e.g. B. pallida or An. curvator (Ferracini et al., Reference Ferracini, Ferrari, Saladini, Pontini, Corradetti and Alma2015; Gil-Tapetado et al., Reference Gil-Tapetado, López-Estrada, Ruiz, Cabrero-Sañudo, Gómez, Durán-Montes, Rey del Castillo, Rodríguez-Rojo, Polidori and José-Luis Nieves-Aldrey2023).

The analyses of our study can be considered as a first attempt or an initial snapshot of the composition and network topology of the primary fauna associated with native cynipid galls in areas with the presence of D. kuriphilus and can be compared in the future by performing the same sampling campaigns and carry out the sample methodology in the Iberian Peninsula. This can be seen both as an approach to observing how biological communities are formed and reshaped from their inception over the years, and how alien species can affect and change native fauna.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007485324000774.

Acknowledgements

We thank Maria Pilar Rodríguez for assistance in fieldwork and samplings.

Author contributions

Conceived and designed the work: J.-L. N.-A., D. G.-T., and J. F. G. Performed the experiments and analysed the data: D. G.-T., J.-L. N.-A., and C. P. Contributed materials/analysis tools: J.-L. N.-A. and D. G.-T. Wrote the paper: D. G.-T., C. P., J.-L. N.-A., and J. F. G.

Competing interests

None.

References

Aebi, A, Schönrogge, K, Melika, G, Alma, A, Bosio, G, Quacchia, A, Picciau, L, Abe, Y, Moriya, S, Yara, K, Seljak, G and Stone, GN (2006) Parasitoid recruitment to the globally invasive chestnut gall wasp Dryocosmus kuriphilus. In Ozaki, K et al. (eds), Galling Arthropods and Their Associates: Ecology and Evolution. Kyoto, Japan: Springer, pp. 103121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Agosta, SJ, Janz, N and Brooks, DR (2010) How specialists can be generalists: resolving the ‘parasite paradox’ and implications for emerging infectious disease. Zoologia (Curitiba) 27, 151162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Askew, RR (1971) Parasitic Insects. London: Heinemann Educational Books.Google Scholar
Askew, RR, Plantard, O, Gómez, JF, Nieves, MH and Nieves-Aldrey, JL (2006) Catalogue of parasitoids and inquilines in galls of Aylacini, Diplolepidini and Pediaspidini (Hym., Cynipidae) in the West Palaearctic. Zootaxa 1301, 160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Askew, RR, Melika, G, Pujade-Villar, J, Schoenrogge, K, Stone, GN and Nieves-Aldrey, JL (2013) Catalogue of parasitoids and inquilines in cynipid oak galls in the West Palaearctic. Zootaxa 3643, 1133.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Battisti, A, Benvegnù, I, Colombari, F and Haack, RA (2014) Invasion by the chestnut gall wasp in Italy causes significant yield loss in Castanea sativa nut production. Agriculture and Forest Entomology 16, 7579.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bearhop, S, Adams, CE, Waldron, S, Fuller, RA and MacLeod, H (2004) Determining trophic niche width: a novel approach using stable isotope analysis. Journal of Animal Ecology 73, 10071012.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bonsignore, CP, Vono, G and Bernardo, U (2019) Environmental thermal levels affect the phenological relationships between the chestnut gall wasp and its parasitoids. Physiological Entomology 44, 8798.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bonsignore, CP, Vizzari, G, Vono, G and Bernardo, U (2020) Short-term cold stress affects parasitism on the Asian chestnut gall wasp Dryocosmus kuriphilus. Insects 11, 841.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Borowiec, N, Thaon, M, Brancaccio, L, Cailleret, B, Ris, N and Vercken, E (2018) Early population dynamics in classical biological control: establishment of the exotic parasitoid Torymus sinensis and control of its target pest, the chestnut gall wasp Dryocosmus kuriphilus, in France. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata 166, 367379.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, BJ, Mitchell, RJ and Graham, SA (2002) Competition for pollination between an invasive species (purple loosestrife) and a native congener. Ecology 83, 23282336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chao, A, Ma, KH, Hsieh, TC and Chiu, CH (2016) SpadeR (species-richness prediction and diversity estimation in R): an R package in CRAN. Program and User's Guide also published at http://chao.stat.nthu.edu.tw/wordpress/software_downloadGoogle Scholar
Cody, ML, MacArthur, RH and Diamond, JM (1975) Ecology and Evolution of Communities. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Colwell, RK (2013) Estimates: Statistical estimation of species richness and shared species from samples. Version 9. User's Guide and Application. Available at http://purl.oclc.org/estimatesGoogle Scholar
Cooper, WR and Rieske, LK (2010) Gall structure affects ecological associations of Dryocosmus kuriphilus (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae). Environmental Entomology 39, 787797.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
de Vere Graham, MWR and Gijswijt, MJ (1998) Revision of the European species of Torymus Dalman (Hymenoptera: Torymidae). Zoologische Verhandelingen 317, 1202.Google Scholar
Dixon, P (2003) VEGAN, a package of R functions for community ecology. Journal of Vegetation Science 14, 927930.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dusa, A (2022) Package ‘venn’. Draw Venn Diagrams (Version 2.04) (R Foundation for Statistical Computing). Available at https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/venn/index.htmlGoogle Scholar
Ferracini, C, Ferrari, E, Saladini, MA, Pontini, M, Corradetti, M and Alma, A (2015) Non-target host risk assessment for the parasitoid Torymus sinensis. BioControl 60, 583594.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferracini, C, Bertolino, S, Bernardo, U, Bonsignore, CP, Faccoli, M, Ferrari, E, Lupi, D, Maini, S, Mazzon, L, Nugnes, F, Rocco, A, Santi, F and Tavella, L (2017) Post-release evaluation of non-target effects of Torymus sinensis, the biological control agent of Dryocosmus kuriphilus in Italy. BioControl 62, 445456.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferracini, C, Bertolino, S, Bernardo, U, Bonsignore, CP, Faccoli, M, Ferrari, E, Lupi, D, Maini, S, Mazzon, L, Nugnes, F, Rocco, A, Santi, F and Tavella, L (2018) Do Torymus sinensis (Hymenoptera: Torymidae) and agroforestry system affect native parasitoids associated with the Asian chestnut gall wasp? Biological Control 121, 3643.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Futuyma, DJ and Moreno, G (1988) The evolution of ecological specialization. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 19, 207233.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gehring, E, Bellosi, B, Reynaud, N and Conedera, M (2020) Chestnut tree damage evolution due to Dryocosmus kuriphilus attacks. Journal of Pest Science 93, 103115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibbs, M, Schönrogge, K, Alma, A, Melika, G, Quacchia, A, Stone, GN and Aebi, A (2011) Torymus sinensis a viable management option for the biological control of Dryocosmus kuriphilus in Europe? BioControl 56, 527538.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gil-Tapetado, D, Gomez, JF, Cabrero-Sañudo, FJ and Nieves-Aldrey, JL (2018) Distribution and dispersal of the invasive Asian chestnut gall wasp, Dryocosmus kuriphilus (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae), across the heterogeneous landscape of the Iberian Peninsula. European Journal of Entomology 115, 575586.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gil-Tapetado, D, Rodríguez-Rojo, MP, Valderas, A and Nieves-Aldrey, JL (2020) Newly invaded territories by Dryocosmus kuriphilus in Spain and first records of Torymus sinensis in the Sistema Central. Forest Systems 29, eSC06.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gil-Tapetado, D, Cabrero-Sañudo, FJ, Gómez, JF, Askew, RR and Nieves-Aldrey, JL (2021a) Differences in native and introduced chalcid parasitoid communities recruited by the invasive chestnut pest Dryocosmus kuriphilus in two Iberian territories. Bulletin of Entomological Research 111, 307322.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gil-Tapetado, D, Castedo-Dorado, F, Lombardero, MJ, Martel, J and Álvarez-Álvarez, P (2021b) Spatial propagation and patterns of abundance of Dryocosmus kuriphilus throughout an invaded region. Journal of Applied Entomology 145, 1025.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gil-Tapetado, D, Castedo-Dorado, F, Nieves-Aldrey, JL and Lombardero, MJ (2021c) Gall size of Dryocosmus kuriphilus limits down-regulation by native parasitoids. Biological Invasions 23, 11571174.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gil-Tapetado, D, Durán-Montes, P, García-París, M, López-Estrada, EK, Sánchez-Vialas, A, Jiménez-Ruiz, Y, Gómez, JF and Nieves-Aldrey, JL (2022) Host specialization is ancestral in Torymus (Hymenoptera, Chalcidoidea) cynipid gall parasitoids. Zoologica Scripta 51, 91118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gil-Tapetado, D, López-Estrada, EK, Ruiz, YJ, Cabrero-Sañudo, FJ, Gómez, JF, Durán-Montes, P, Rey del Castillo, C, Rodríguez-Rojo, MP, Polidori, C and José-Luis Nieves-Aldrey, JL (2023) Torymus sinensis against the invasive chestnut gall wasp: evaluating the physiological host range and hybridization risks of a classical biological control agent. Biological Control 180, 105187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gobbo, E, Lartillot, N, Hearn, J, Stone, GN, Abe, Y, Wheat, CW and Ronquist, F (2020) From inquilines to gall inducers: genomic signature of a life-style transition in Synergus gall wasps. Genome Biology and Evolution 12, 20602073.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gomez, JF, Nieves-Aldrey, JL and Hernandez-Nieves, M (2008) Comparative morphology, biology and phylogeny of terminal-instar larvae of the European species of Toryminae (Hym., Chalcidoidea, Torymidae) parasitoids of gall wasps (Hym. Cynipidae). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society of London 154, 676721.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hyams, DG (2020) CurveExpert Basic 2.0 software. Hyams Development. Available at https://www.curveexpert.net/Google Scholar
IPBES (2019) Global Assessment Report on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy. Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. Bonn, Germany: IPBES Secretariat.Google Scholar
Jara-Chiquito, JL, Askew, RR and Pujade-Villar, J (2020) The invasive ACGW Dryocosmus kuriphilus (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae) in Spain: native parasitoid recruitment and association with oak gall inducers in Catalonia. Forestry 93, 178186.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jost, L (2006) Entropy and diversity. Oikos 113, 363375.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keeler, MS, Chew, FS, Goodale, BC and Reed, JM (2006) Modelling the impacts of two exotic invasive species on a native butterfly: top-down vs. bottom-up effects. Journal of Animal Ecology 75, 777788.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kos, K, Kriston, E and Melika, G (2015) Invasive chestnut gall wasp Dryocosmus kuriphilus (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae), its native parasitoid community and association with oak gall wasps in Slovenia. European Journal of Entomology 112, 698.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Larsson, J, Godfrey, AJR, Gustafsson, P, Eberly, DH, Huber, E and Privé, F (2022) Package ‘eulerr’. Area-Proportional Euler and Venn Diagrams with Ellipses (Version 7.00) (R Foundation for Statistical Computing). Available at https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/eulerr/index.html.Google Scholar
Dormann, CF, Fruend, J, Gruber, B, Dormann, MCF and LazyData and ByteCompile (2014) Package ‘bipartite’. Visualizing bipartite networks and calculating some (ecological) indices (Version 1.11) (R Foundation for Statistical Computing). Available at https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/bipartite/index.htmlGoogle Scholar
Lucchetta, P, Bernstein, C, Théry, M, Lazzari, C and Desouhant, E (2008) Foraging and associative learning of visual signals in a parasitic wasp. Animal Cognition 11, 525533.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacDougall, AS and Turkington, R (2005) Are invasive species the drivers or passengers of change in degraded ecosystems? Ecology 86, 4255.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Matošević, D and Melika, G (2013) Recruitment of native parasitoids to a new invasive host: first results of Dryocosmus kuriphilus parasitoid assemblage in Croatia. Bulletin of Insectology 66, 231238.Google Scholar
Mollot, G, Pantel, JH, Romanuk, TN (2017) The effects of invasive species on the decline in species richness: a global meta-analysis. In Bohan, et al. (ed.), Oxford: Advances in Ecological Research, vol. 56. Oxford: Academic Press, pp. 6183.Google Scholar
Nieves-Aldrey, JL (2001) Hymenoptera: Cynipidae, Vol. 16. Madrid, Spain: Editorial CSIC-CSIC Press.Google Scholar
Nieves-Aldrey, JL, Gil-Tapetado, D, Gavira, O, Boyero, JR, Polidori, C, Lombardero, MJ, Blanco, D, Rey del Castillo, C, Rodriguez Rojo, MP, Vela, JM and Wong, E (2019) Torymus sinensis Kamijo, a biocontrol agent against the invasive chestnut gall wasp Dryocosmus kuriphilus Yasumatsu in Spain: its natural dispersal from France and the first data on establishment after experimental releases. Forest Systems 28, e001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nieves-Aldrey, JL, Gil-Tapetado, D and Askew, RR (2020) Mesopolobus delafuentei sp. nov.: a new pteromalid species from Spain (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae), with notes on other parasitoids associated with Andricus crispator Tscheck (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae), a gall wasp on cork oaks. Monografias Tercer Milenio 10, 103110.Google Scholar
Noyes, JS (2019) Universal Chalcidoidea Database. World Wide Web electronic publication. Available at http://www.nhm.ac.uk/chalcidoidsGoogle Scholar
Olsson, K, Stenroth, P, Nyström, PER and Granéli, W (2009) Invasions and niche width: does niche width of an introduced crayfish differ from a native crayfish? Freshwater Biology 54, 17311740.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peel, MC, Finlayson, BL and McMahon, TA (2007) Updated world map of the Köppen-Geiger climate classification. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences 11, 16331644.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pérez-Otero, R, Crespo, D and Vázquez, JPM (2017) Dryocosmus kuriphilus Yasumatsu, 1951 (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae) in Galicia (NW Spain): pest dispersion, associated parasitoids and first biological control attempts. Arquivos Entomolóxicos 17, 439448.Google Scholar
Pimentel, D, Zuniga, R and Morrison, D (2005) Update on the environmental and economic costs associated with alien-invasive species in the United States. Ecology Economics 52, 273288.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pividori, M, Giannetti, F, Barbati, A and Chirici, G (2016) European forest types: tree species matrix. European Atlas of Forest Tree Species, e01f162.Google Scholar
Pyšek, P and Richardson, DM (2010) Invasive species, environmental change and management, and health. Annual Review of Environment and Resources 35, 2555.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pyšek, P, Hulme, PE, Simberloff, D, Bacher, S, Blackburn, TM, Carlton, JT, et al. (2020) Scientists' warning on invasive alien species. Biological Reviews 95, 15111534.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Quacchia, A, Moriya, S, Bosio, G, Scapin, I and Alma, A (2008) Rearing, release and settlement prospect in Italy of Torymus sinensis, the biological control agent of the chestnut gall wasp Dryocosmus kuriphilus. BioControl 53, 829839.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quacchia, A, Ferracini, C, Nicholls, JA, Piazza, E, Saladini, MA, Tota, F, Melika, G and Alma, A (2013) Chalcid parasitoid community associated with the invading pest Dryocosmus kuriphilus in north-western Italy. Insect Conservation and Diversity 6, 114123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quicke, DL (1997) Parasitic Wasps. London: Chapman & Hall Ltd.Google Scholar
R Development Core Team (2023) R: A language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing. Available at http://www.R-project.org (accessed 22 March 2023).Google Scholar
Rigling, D and Prospero, S (2018) Cryphonectria parasitica, the causal agent of chestnut blight: invasion history, population biology and disease control. Molecular Plant Pathology 19, 720.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ronchetti, F and Polidori, C (2020) A sting affair: a global quantitative exploration of bee, wasp and ant hosts of velvet ants. PLoS ONE 15, e0238888.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ronquist, F (1994) Evolution of parasitism among closely related species: phylogenetic relationships and the origin of inquilinism in gall wasps (Hymenoptera, Cynipidae). Evolution 48(2), 241266.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
RStudio Team (2022) RStudio: Integrated development for R RStudio. Available at https://posit.co/products/open-source/rstudio/ (accessed 22 March 2023).Google Scholar
Stone, GN and Cook, JM (1998) The structure of cynipid oak galls: patterns in the evolution of an extended phenotype. Proceedings B is the Royal Society – Biological Sciences 265, 979988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stone, GN and Schönrogge, K (2003) The adaptive significance of insect gall morphology. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 18, 512522.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stone, GN, Schönrogge, K, Atkinson, RJ, Bellido, D and Pujade-Villar, J (2002) The population biology of oak gallwasps (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae). Annual Review of Entomology 47, 633668.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strange, EF, Landi, P, Hill, JM and Coetzee, JA (2019) Modeling top-down and bottom-up drivers of a regime shift in invasive aquatic plant stable states. Frontiers in Plant Science 10, 889.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tecco, PA, Gurvich, DE, Díaz, S, Pérez-Harguindeguy, N and Cabido, M (2006) Positive interaction between invasive plants: the influence of Pyracantha angustifolia on the recruitment of native and exotic woody species. Austral Ecology 31, 293300.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, JN (1999) The evolution of species interactions. Science (New York, N.Y.) 284, 21162118.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tumlinson, JH, Lewis, WJ and Vet, LE (1993) How parasitic wasps find their hosts. Scientific American 268, 100106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turlings, TC and Benrey, B (1998) Effects of plant metabolites on the behavior and development of parasitic wasps. Ecoscience 5, 321333.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vannini, A and Vettraino, AM (2001) Ink disease in chestnuts: impact on the European chestnut. Forest Snow and Landscape Research 76, 345350.Google Scholar
Vitousek, PM, D'antonio, CM, Loope, LL, Rejmanek, M and Westbrooks, R (1997) Introduced species: a significant component of human-caused global change. New Zealand Journal of Ecology 21, 116.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Galls of sampled native cynipid species: (A) B. pallida, (B) An. curvator (sex.), (C) Andricus coriarius (asex.), (D) Andricus grossulariae (asex.), (E) An. hispanicus (asex.), (F) Andricus pictus (asex), (G) Cynips quercus (asex.), (H) Neuroterus quercusbaccarum (sex.), (I) Trigonaspis mendesi (asex), (J) Andricus quercusramuli (sex.), (K) Pl. quercusilicis (sex), (L) An. crispator (sex), (M) Diastrophus rubi, (N) Diplolepis rosae, and (O) Isocolus lichtensteini. (A), (B), (G), (H), (K), (L), (M), and (O) species are examples of simple galls; (C), (D), (E), (F), and (I) of complex lignified galls; (J) and (N) of complex hairy galls. © J.L. Nieves-Aldrey.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Segregation Venn analysis of parasitoid and inquiline species that we have found in our samplings in different host plants comparing with those founded on D. kuriphilus on Castanea: (A) herbaceous (Asteraceae) and bushes (Rosa and Rubus). (B) trees (Quercus), categorised in section Quercus (Q. robur, Q. petraea, Q. canariensis, Q. pyrenaica, and Q. faginea), Q. ilex + cocc (Q. ilex and Q. coccifera), and Q. suber. We also included parasitoids and inquilines on Rosa due to the sharing species it has with D. kuriphilus. (C) Proportional Venn analysis showing the numbers and percentages of species that share and are exclusive to each host plant category. For a better interpretation of the figure, the percentage values are rounded. *The exclusive species of D. kuriphilus, Pa. concolor, is a parasitoid of the secondary fauna inhabiting the galls of D. kuriphilus and does not really represent a trophic relationship with this cynipid.

Figure 2

Table 1. Bray–Curtis' similarity (in percentage) among the primary fauna of each five categories of the host plant

Figure 3

Figure 3. True diversity of primary fauna by host species of Cynipidae with a representation of collected galls (>30), emerged species (>6), and individuals (>20) of parasitoids and inquilines. Colours denote each host plant category. Light tones represent the value of total species richness (q0); medium tones, the effective species (q1); and dark tones, the dominant species (q2). *Andricus burgundus is a cryptic species complex formed by different bisexual generations of species of Andricus in Q. suber with a quite similar morphology.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Food webs performed with three different categorisations of the lower level: host species (left, in blue), host plant of the Cynipidae (centre, in green), and the type of the gall induced by the host species (right, in red).

Figure 5

Table 2. Values of the network parameters, considering three different traits: the host species of Cynipidae, the host plant of the host species, and the gall type of the hosts

Figure 6

Figure 5. (A) Violin diagrams with the comparison between the d′ (individual specialisation) of the primary fauna of Cynipidae by each category. ANOVA test, F = 28.73, P < 0.00001. (B) Ranking of primary fauna species with the sum of d′ of each category, indicating a gradient of generalist and specialist species. Dots mark the primary fauna associated with D. kuriphilus studied in this article (data of samplings of Gil-Tapetado et al., 2021a) and cross mark the primary fauna associated with this host detected in the Iberian Peninsula (data compilation of Gil-Tapetado et al., 2021a).

Supplementary material: File

Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material 1

Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material
Download Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material 1(File)
File 26.4 KB
Supplementary material: File

Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material 2

Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material
Download Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material 2(File)
File 12.7 KB
Supplementary material: File

Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material 3

Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material
Download Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material 3(File)
File 13.4 KB
Supplementary material: File

Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material 4

Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material
Download Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material 4(File)
File 10.8 KB
Supplementary material: File

Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material 5

Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material
Download Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material 5(File)
File 4.1 MB
Supplementary material: File

Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material 6

Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material
Download Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material 6(File)
File 602.3 KB
Supplementary material: File

Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material 7

Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material
Download Gil-Tapetado et al. supplementary material 7(File)
File 1.5 MB