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The timing of heat waves has multiyear effects on milkweed and its insect community.

Olivia L CopeLuke N ZehrAnurag A AgrawalWilliam C Wetzel
Published in: Ecology (2023)
Extreme heat events are becoming more frequent and intense as climate variability increases, and these events inherently vary in their timing. We predicted that the timing of a heat wave would determine its consequences for insect communities, due to temporal variation in susceptibility of host plants to heat stress. We subjected common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca) plants to in-field experimental heat waves to investigate how the timing of heat waves, both seasonally and relative to a biotic stressor (experimental herbivory), affected their ecological consequences. We found that heat waves had multiyear, timing-specific effects on plant-insect communities. Early-season heat waves led to greater and more persistent effects on plants and herbivore communities than late-season heat waves. Heat waves following experimental herbivory had reduced consequences. Our results show that extreme climate events can have complex, lasting ecological effects beyond the year of the event - and that timing is key to understanding those effects. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Keyphrases
  • heat stress
  • climate change
  • heat shock
  • healthcare
  • aedes aegypti