ecologists have tended to view plants as relatively passive participants in short-term interactions at the plant-herbivore interface, suffering tissue reduction from herbivory, and responding in evolutionary time through the evolution of novel antiherbivore chemicals and structures (Fraenkel 1959;Ehrlich and Raven 1964;Levin 1971Levin , 1973Caswell et al. 1973;Freeland and Janzen 1974). Agronomists, botanists, foresters, and range managers, however, have frequently emphasized the direct plant responses to herbivory of compensatory growth and assimilate reallocation (