Prevalence of Leaf Parasitism by Insects and Fungi in Wild Plant Communities: Implications for Community Assembly

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Authors

Xi Wang , Kazuyuki Hiratsuka, Fumito Koike

Abstract

Parasitism by infectious diseases and insect pests significantly shapes wild plant communities by stabilizing them through suppressing dominant species and destabilizing them by suppressing minor species. However, the dynamics of parasitism in wild ecosystems remain understudied. This study aimed to determine whether parasites infect a wide range of host species or are plant-specific, assess the stabilizing and destabilizing effects of parasitism on plant community structure, and determine the influence of environmental and seasonal factors on parasitism. Methods: We conducted field surveys in herbaceous plant communities within a 1 km² area in the Tokyo metropolitan region, focusing on fungal diseases (rust-like and powdery mildew-like symptoms) and leaf-eating insect pests. Using zero-inflated binomial regression, we evaluated the symptom prevalence and intensity of parasitism across species, seasons, and environmental variables. Results: The results indicated that a few plant species were highly susceptible to parasitism, with rust-like infections tending to predominantly affect dominant species and leaf-eating insects targeting minor species. Conclusion: These findings highlight the contrasting roles of parasites in stabilizing and destabilizing plant communities and that both environmental and seasonal factors influence parasitism similar to cultivated ecosystems.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.32942/X2Q339

Subjects

Parasitology, Plant Pathology, Population Biology

Keywords

plant community process, fungal disease, insect pest, host susceptibility, zero-inflated binomial regression, plant-parasite dynamics, suburban landscape, epidemiological triangle

Dates

Published: 2025-01-29 18:37

Last Updated: 2025-02-04 08:21

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License

CC BY Attribution 4.0 International

Additional Metadata

Language:
English

Data and Code Availability Statement:
The data, code supporting the findings of this study, and supplementary results are available at Zenodo, accessible via the following DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.13758799. 402