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      Leaf ageing promotes the shift in defence tactics inMallotus japonicusfrom direct to indirect defence : Defence-tactics shift inMallotus

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      Journal of Ecology
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          HERBIVORY AND PLANT DEFENSES IN TROPICAL FORESTS

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            Plant defense syndromes.

            Given that a plant's defensive strategy against herbivory is never likely to be a single trait, we develop the concept of plant defense syndromes, where association with specific ecological interactions can result in convergence on suites of covarying defensive traits. Defense syndromes can be studied within communities of diverse plant species as well as within clades of closely related species. In either case, theory predicts that plant defense traits can consistently covary across species, due to shared evolutionary ancestry or due to adaptive convergence. We examined potential defense syndromes in 24 species of milkweeds (Asclepias spp.) in a field experiment. Employing phylogenetically independent contrasts, we found few correlations between seven defensive traits, no bivariate trade-offs, and notable positive correlations between trichome density and latex production, and between C:N ratio and leaf toughness. We then used a hierarchical cluster analysis to produce a phenogram of defense trait similarity among the 24 species. This analysis revealed three distinct clusters of species. The defense syndromes of these species clusters are associated with either low nutritional quality or a balance of higher nutritional quality coupled with physical or chemical defenses. The phenogram based on defense traits was not congruent, however, with a molecular phylogeny of the group, suggesting convergence on defense syndromes. Finally, we examined the performance of monarch butterfly caterpillars on the 24 milkweed species in the field; monarch growth and survival did not differ on plants in the three syndromes, although multiple regression revealed that leaf trichomes and toughness significantly reduced caterpillar growth. The discovery of convergent plant defense syndromes can be used as a framework to ask questions about how abiotic environments, communities of herbivores, and biogeography are associated with particular defense strategies of plants.
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              Direct and ecological costs of resistance to herbivory

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Ecology
                Wiley-Blackwell
                00220477
                May 2012
                May 06 2012
                : 100
                : 3
                : 802-809
                Article
                10.1111/j.1365-2745.2011.01934.x
                bc9d99eb-bc23-4bf2-be9b-da2650ee716d
                © 2012

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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