| Literature DB >> 28312670 |
Erkki Haukioja1, Kai Ruohomäki1, Josef Senn2, Janne Suomela1, Mari Walls1.
Abstract
Three types of experiments indicate that the functional organization of the mountain birch may influence the ways in which the tree responds to simulated or natural herbivory. The first experiment showed that herbivory to both short and long shoot leaves affects plant development but, because growth largely proceeds by resources of the previous year, is manifested only in the year following the damage. The second experiment showed that even partial damage to a single long shoot leaf caused the axillary bud of that leaf to produce a shorter shoot the next year. Therefore, the value of a leaf depends also on the organ which it is subtending. In the third experiment we manipulated the apical dominance of shoots in ramets and caused improvement to leaf quality in extant shoots. Ramets within a tree responded individually, probably mediated by disturbance of the hormonal control because removal of apical buds elicited the response although removal of the same number of basal buds did not. Induced amelioration is a different response to induced resistance. The two responses are triggered by different cues and may occur in the same plant. By altering hormonal balance of shoots it is potentially possible for herbivores to induce amelioration of food quality. The ways in which herbivory is simulated may explain variability of results obtained when herbivory-induced responses in plants have been studied.Keywords: Apical dominance; Epirrita autumnata; Induced amelioration; Induced defence; Modularity
Year: 1990 PMID: 28312670 DOI: 10.1007/BF00323540
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oecologia ISSN: 0029-8549 Impact factor: 3.225