Publication: Parallel increases in insect herbivory and defenses with increasing elevation for both saplings and adult trees of oak (Quercus) species
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Wiley
Abstract
PREMISE: Herbivory is predicted to increase toward warmer and more stable climates
found at lower elevations, and this increase should select for higher plant defenses. Still,
a number of recent studies have reported either no evidence of such gradients or reverse
patterns. One source of inconsistency may be that plant ontogenetic variation is usually
not accounted for and may influence levels of plant defenses and herbivory.
METHODS: We tested for elevational gradients in insect leaf herbivory and leaf traits
putatively associated with herbivore resistance across eight oak (Quercus, Fagaceae)
species and compared these patterns for saplings and adult trees. To this end, we surveyed
insect leaf herbivory and leaf traits (phenolic compounds, toughness and nutrients) in
naturally occurring populations of each oak species at low-, mid- or high-elevation sites
throughout the Iberian Peninsula.
RESULTS: Leaf herbivory and chemical defenses (lignins) were unexpectedly higher at midand
high-elevation sites than at low-elevation sites. In addition, leaf chemical defenses
(lignins and condensed tannins) were higher for saplings than adult trees, whereas
herbivory did not significantly differ between ontogenetic stages. Overall, elevational
variation in herbivory and plant chemical defenses were consistent across ontogenetic
stages (i.e., elevational gradients were not contingent upon tree ontogeny), and herbivory
and leaf traits were not associated across elevations.
CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest disassociated patterns of elevational variation in
herbivory and leaf traits, which, in turn, are independent of plant ontogenetic stage.
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info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MINECO//AGL2015-70748-R/ES/FACTORES QUE DETERMINAN LA EXISTENCIA DE SINDROMES DEFENSIVOS EN ESPECIES DEL GENERO QUERCUS EN LA PENINSULA IBERICA: IMPLICACIONES PARA LA CONSERVACION DE ESPECIES AMENAZADAS/
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MINECO//RYC-2013-13230/ES/RYC-2013-13230/
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MINECO//RYC-2013-13230/ES/RYC-2013-13230/
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American Journal of Botany, 106(12): 1558-1565.






