“…Such interactions are relevant because insects can be active during the non‐growing season (i.e., autumn and winter), such some leafhoppers (Stinson & Brown, 1983 ), sawflies (Kause et al., 2001 ), and larvae of leaf‐mining moths (Connor et al., 1994 ), which re‐appear with a second generation during late summer and/or consume leaves until senescence occurs in mid to late autumn (Connor et al., 1994 ). Furthermore, warming temperatures are causing winter to become shorter in some geographical regions, with frost occurring later in the season (Loe et al., 2021 ; Sparks & Menzel, 2002 ; Williams et al., 2015 ) and leaf herbivory extending into early autumn (Gallinat et al., 2015 ; Loe et al., 2021 ; Zani et al., 2020 ), such as with caterpillars, leaf miners, and gall wasps (Ekholm et al., 2019 , 2022 ). For example, Lemoine et al.…”