| Literature DB >> 24596490 |
Eric J Tepe1, Genoveva Rodríguez-Castañeda2, Andrea E Glassmire3, Lee A Dyer3.
Abstract
We describe Piper kelleyi sp. nov., a new species from the eastern Andes of Ecuador and Peru, named in honor of Dr. Walter Almond Kelley. Piper kelleyi is a member of the Macrostachys clade of the genus Piper and supports a rich community of generalist and specialist herbivores, their predators and parasitoids, as well as commensalistic earwigs, and mutualistic ants. This new species was recognized as part of an ecological study of phytochemically mediated relationships between plants, herbivores, predators, and parasitoids. Compared to over 100 other Piper species surveyed, Piper kelleyi supports the largest community of specialist herbivores and parasitoids observed to date.Entities:
Keywords: Andes; Braconidae; Ecuador; Eois; Geometridae; Piper section Macrostachys; Piperaceae; Tachinidae; herbivore-parasitoid interactions; plant-herbivore interactions
Year: 2014 PMID: 24596490 PMCID: PMC3941067 DOI: 10.3897/phytokeys.34.6376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PhytoKeys ISSN: 1314-2003 Impact factor: 1.635
Figure 1.Tepe. A leaf and inflorescence B Stamen C fruit in lateral view D Fruit in apical view E Bracts in apical view. [A and E (lower) drawn from Tepe et al. 1597; B–E (upper) drawn from Tepe et al. 2615]
Figure 2.. A Habit B Close-up of leaves showing characteristic red color of younger leaves [Tepe et al. 2381] C Close-up of inflorescence [Tepe et al. 2615] D Close-up of infructescence [Tepe et al. 1597].
Figure 3.Distribution of . A Distribution of known localities based on collections (open diamonds) and study plots used to gather natural history data (blue circles) B Predicted distribution based on analysis of habitat parameters using the maximum entropy method. Areas in red are the most likely to have suitable habitat for (probability = 0.75–0.87), and areas in blue (0.02–0.08) or unlabeled (< 0.02) are the least likely.
Figure 4.A Leaf of with characteristic herbivory marks or “windows” made by the specialist herbivore species of that specialize on include B (Dognin) C aff. viridiflava (Dognin) D (Dognin) E (Dognin) F aff. pallidicosta (Warren) G (Dognin) H aff. encina (Dognin).
Figure 5.A colony of ants nesting inside a petiole of .