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- Title
Plant quality and predation risk mediated by plant ontogeny: consequences for herbivores and plants.
- Authors
Boege, Karina; Marquis, Robert J.
- Abstract
Bottom-up and top-down impacts on herbivores can be influenced by plant productivity, structural complexity, vigor and size. Although these traits are likely to vary with plant development, the influence of plant ontogeny on the relative importance of plant quality (i.e. bottom-up forces) and predation risk (i.e. top-down forces) has been the focus of little previous investigation. We evaluated the role of plant ontogeny for the relative importance of bottom-up and top-down forces on insect herbivore abundance, species richness, and species diversity attacking the tropical tree Casearia nitida. We also quantified the cascading effects on herbivory, growth and reproduction of this plant species. Plant quality traits (nitrogen and phenolic compounds) were assessed in saplings and reproductive trees. Bottom-up forces were manipulated by fertilizing plants from both ontogenetic stages. Top-down forces were manipulated by excluding insectivorous birds from saplings and reproductive trees. Plant ontogeny influenced foliage quality in terms of total phenolics, which were in greater concentration in reproductive trees than in saplings; however, it did not influence bottom-up forces as modified by fertilization. Bird exclusion increased herbivore density with the same magnitude on both stages. Ontogeny influenced species diversity, which was greater in reproductive trees than in saplings, and also influenced treatment impacts on species richness and diversity. Although top-down forces increased herbivory equally on plants of each ontogenetic stage, the two stages showed different overcompensation responses to increased damage: caged saplings produced greater leaf biomass than non-caged saplings, whereas caged trees increased in height proportionally more than non-caged trees. In sum, plant ontogeny influenced the impact of bird predation on herbivore density, species richness, and species diversity, and the growth variables affected by increased damage in caged plants. We suggest that plant ontogeny can contribute to some extent to the influence of plant quality and the third trophic level on herbivores in this system.
- Subjects
BOTANICAL research; PLANT physiology; PLANT development; PLANT growth; PLANT species; ONTOGENY; DEVELOPMENTAL biology; SPECIES diversity; HERBIVORES
- Publication
Oikos, 2006, Vol 115, Issue 3, p559
- ISSN
0030-1299
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.2006.0030-1299.15076.x