| Literature DB >> 30261869 |
Brian P Allman1, Knut Kielland1, Diane Wagner2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Damage to plants by herbivores potentially affects the quality and quantity of the plant tissue available to other herbivore taxa that utilize the same host plants at a later time. This study addresses the indirect effects of insect herbivores on mammalian browsers, a particularly poorly-understood class of interactions. Working in the Alaskan boreal forest, we investigated the indirect effects of insect damage to Salix interior leaves during the growing season on the consumption of browse by moose during winter, and on quantity and quality of browse production.Entities:
Keywords: Browsing; Defoliation; Herbivory; Indirect effects; Insect outbreak; Leaf mining; Micrurapteryx salicifoliella; Salix interior
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30261869 PMCID: PMC6161349 DOI: 10.1186/s12898-018-0192-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ecol ISSN: 1472-6785 Impact factor: 2.964
Fig. 1Patterns of leaf damage sustained by S. interior plants that received natural levels of herbivory (controls) and plants treated with insecticide to reduce folivory. Types of damage shown are total folivory (the sum of all insect feeding damage), leaf mining alone, missing tissue removed by external leaf chewers and skeletonizers alone, and infection by tar spot fungus (Rhytisma acerinum). Asterisks identify statistical significance at P < 0.05
Fig. 2Effect of insecticide treatment during the growing season on subsequent stem production by, and overwinter browsing on, Salix interior: panel a stem biomass produced, panel b stem biomass browsed; panel c proportion of stem production browsed. Means and standard errors (g per plant) are based on a sample size of 35 plants each for treatment and control. Asterisks identify statistical significance at P < 0.05