نتایج جستجو برای: herbivore

تعداد نتایج: 4606  

2016
Stephan Kambach Ingolf Kühn Bastien Castagneyrol Helge Bruelheide

Forests with higher tree diversity are often assumed to be more resistant to insect herbivores but whether this effect depends on climatic conditions is so far poorly understood. In particular, a forest's resistance to herbivory may depend on mean annual temperature (MAT) as a key driver of plant and insect phenology. We carried out a global meta-analysis on regression coefficients between tree...

2005
Jennifer A. Schweitzer Joseph K. Bailey Stephen C. Hart Gina M. Wimp Samantha K. Chapman Thomas G. Whitham

We examined how plant genetic variation and a common herbivore (the leaf-galling aphid, Pemphigus betae ) influenced leaf litter quality, decomposition, and nutrient dynamics in a dominant riparian tree (Populus spp.). Based on both observational studies and a herbivore exclusion experiment using trees of known genotype, we found four major patterns: 1) the quality of galled vs non-galled or ga...

2006
Peter Tiffin Brian D. Inouye Nora Underwood

Questions: Does the evolution of anti-herbivore defences depend on whether the defences are induced or constitutively expressed? Mathematical methods: Cost–benefit model examining invasion and fixation conditions. Key assumptions: Annual plant, haploid. Defence affects herbivore preference and performance. Induced defences are expressed only after herbivore attack and there is a lag between att...

2014

1. The plant–herbivore arms race has been postulated to be amajor driver for generating biological and biochemical diversity on Earth. Herbivore feeding is reduced by the production of chemical and physical barriers, but increases plant resistance against subsequent attack. Accordingly, specialisation is predicted to be an outcome of herbivores being able to circumvent plant-induced defences. 2...

2017
Tania N Kim

Neighboring plants can decrease or increase each other's likelihood of damage from herbivores through associational resistance or susceptibility, respectively. Associational effects (AE) can transpire through changes in herbivore or plant traits that affect herbivore movement, densities, and feeding behaviors to ultimately affect plant damage. While much work has focused on understanding the me...

2010
Roosa Leimu Markus Fischer

Between-population crosses may replenish genetic variation of populations, but may also result in outbreeding depression. Apart from direct effects on plant fitness, these outbreeding effects can also alter plant-herbivore interactions by influencing plant tolerance and resistance to herbivory. We investigated effects of experimental within- and between-population outbreeding on herbivore resis...

2015
Jonathan P. Green Rosie Foster Lucas Wilkins Daniel Osorio Susan E. Hartley Robert Glinwood

Leaf colour has been proposed to signal levels of host defence to insect herbivores, but we lack data on herbivory, leaf colour and levels of defence for wild host populations necessary to test this hypothesis. Such a test requires measurements of leaf spectra as they would be sensed by herbivore visual systems, as well as simultaneous measurements of chemical defences and herbivore responses t...

Journal: :Science 2007
David A Norton Raphael K Didham

Novotny et al. (Reports, 25 August 2006, p. 1115) argued that higher herbivore diversity in tropical forests results from greater phylogenetic diversity of host plants, not from higher host specificity. However, if host specificity is related to host abundance, differences in relative host abundance between tropical and temperate regions may limit any general conclusion that herbivore diversity...

Journal: :Current opinion in plant biology 2000
G W Felton K L Korth

During the past year genetic and pharmacological experiments have revealed a molecular basis for the cross-talk between signaling pathways mediating pathogen and herbivore resistance. These findings provide considerable insight into the apparently contradictory results reported for trade-offs between pathogen and herbivore resistance.

2011
Soroush Parsa Guillermo Sotelo Cesar Cardona

Plants can resist herbivore damage through three broad mechanisms: antixenosis, antibiosis and tolerance(1). Antixenosis is the degree to which the plant is avoided when the herbivore is able to select other plants(2). Antibiosis is the degree to which the plant affects the fitness of the herbivore feeding on it(1).Tolerance is the degree to which the plant can withstand or repair damage caused...

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