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- Title
Differences between understorey and canopy in herbivore community composition and leaf quality for two oak species in Missouri.
- Authors
Corff, Josiane LE.; Marquis, Robert J.
- Abstract
Summary1. From July 1994 to September 1995, at six censuses, the herbivore community associated with understorey (< 2.5 m height) and canopy (15–20 m) leaves of Quercus alba and Q. velutina was sampled in south-eastern Missouri, U.S.A. 2. Across all censuses, herbivore densities were not significantly different between canopy and understorey for Q. alba and Q. velutina, except in August 1994 when herbivore densities were 60% higher in the canopy on Q. alba. Little significant spatial variation in herbivore densities or community composition was found during the study years. 3. The herbivore community was diverse, consisting of 138 species of leaf-chewing insects. Species richness was significantly greater (by 5–20%) in the understorey than in the canopy for both tree species, and the relative abundance of the main families, different feeding guilds, and most common species differed significantly between understorey and canopy. 4. To determine the extent to which leaf quality explained the observed patterns, percentage nitrogen and protein binding capacity were measured in canopy and understorey leaves of Q. alba and Q. velutina. Per cent nitrogen was higher in canopy leaves for Q. velutina while protein binding capacity was higher in canopy leaves for Q. alba. 5. These results suggest that the herbivore community associated with these two species of Quercus comprises species that appear to respond individually to environmental and biological conditions encountered in the understorey and the canopy.
- Subjects
MISSOURI; UNITED States; HERBIVORES; UNDERSTORY plants; WHITE oak; QUERCUS velutina
- Publication
Ecological Entomology, 1999, Vol 24, Issue 1, p46
- ISSN
0307-6946
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1046/j.1365-2311.1999.00174.x