Mechanisms, ecological consequences and agricultural implications of tri-trophic interactions |
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Authors: | Agrawal A A |
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Affiliation: | Department of Botany, University of Toronto, Toronto, M5S 3B2, Canada. agrawal@botany.utoronto.ca |
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Abstract: | Recent research bridging mechanistic and ecological approaches demonstrates that plant attributes can affect herbivores, natural enemies of herbivores, and their interaction. Such effects may be genetically variable among plants and/or induced in individual plants by herbivore attack, and are mediated by primary plant attributes (i.e. nutritional quality and physical structure) and defense-related products (i.e. secondary chemicals and plant volatiles), and may be modified by human activity (e.g. by the introduction of Bacillus thuringiensis). The study of tri-trophic interactions is important in order to understand natural species interactions and to manipulate these interactions in pest control. |
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