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Plant traits affecting herbivory on tree recruits in highly diverse subtropical forests
Authors:Schuldt Andreas  Bruelheide Helge  Durka Walter  Eichenberg David  Fischer Markus  Kröber Wenzel  Härdtle Werner  Ma Keping  Michalski Stefan G  Palm Wolf-Ulrich  Schmid Bernhard  Welk Erik  Zhou Hongzhang  Assmann Thorsten
Affiliation:Institute of Ecology, Leuphana University Lüneburg, Scharnhorststr. 1, Lüneburg, D-21335, Germany.
Abstract:Differences in herbivory among woody species can greatly affect the functioning of forest ecosystems, particularly in species-rich (sub)tropical regions. However, the relative importance of the different plant traits which determine herbivore damage remains unclear. Defence traits can have strong effects on herbivory, but rarely studied geographical range characteristics could complement these effects through evolutionary associations with herbivores. Herein, we use a large number of morphological, chemical, phylogenetic and biogeographical characteristics to analyse interspecific differences in herbivory on tree saplings in subtropical China. Unexpectedly, we found no significant effects of chemical defence traits. Rather, herbivory was related to the plants' leaf morphology, local abundance and climatic niche characteristics, which together explained 70% of the interspecific variation in herbivory in phylogenetic regression. Our study indicates that besides defence traits and apparency to herbivores, previously neglected measures of large-scale geographical host distribution are important factors influencing local herbivory patterns among plant species.
Keywords:BEF‐China  ecosystem functioning  Gutianshan National Nature Reserve  latitudinal range  phenolics  phytochemical diversity  plant defence  plant–insect interaction  species richness  tannins
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