2020
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-020-04804-8
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Plant apparency drives leaf herbivory in seedling communities across four subtropical forests

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Cited by 17 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…Our finding was in an opposite direction with the prediction of the plant apparency hypothesis. Previous studies supporting the plant apparency hypothesis often were conducted with different sized saplings or individual adults of the same species (Castagneyrol et al 2013;Zverev et al 2017;Martini et al 2021) and their ranges in canopy heights was quite limited (e.g., less than 2 m for saplings and less than 20 m for adults) compared to our work. It should be notified that the effect of plant apparency and ontogenetic effects on herbivory were intertwined and could not be separated in these studies (Boege & Marquis 2005).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 61%
“…Our finding was in an opposite direction with the prediction of the plant apparency hypothesis. Previous studies supporting the plant apparency hypothesis often were conducted with different sized saplings or individual adults of the same species (Castagneyrol et al 2013;Zverev et al 2017;Martini et al 2021) and their ranges in canopy heights was quite limited (e.g., less than 2 m for saplings and less than 20 m for adults) compared to our work. It should be notified that the effect of plant apparency and ontogenetic effects on herbivory were intertwined and could not be separated in these studies (Boege & Marquis 2005).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 61%
“…Our finding was contrary to the assumption of the plant apparency hypothesis. Previous studies supporting the plant apparency hypothesis were often conducted with differently sized saplings or individual adults of the same species (Castagneyrol et al, 2013;Martini et al, 2021;Zverev et al, 2017) and their ranges in canopy heights were quite limited (e.g., less than 2 m for saplings and less than 20 m for adults) compared with our work. It should be noted that the effect of plant apparency…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 61%
“…Several other hypotheses have been proposed for explaining the variations in herbivory across different individuals or species within a community: The plant apparency hypothesis assumes that more apparency species or individuals are more easily found by herbivores and those species or individuals will have higher herbivory levels than others (Feeny, 1976). Plant height (or size) and abundance are two commonly used indicators of apparency in both the original paper (Feeny, 1976) and related case studies (Castagneyrol et al, 2013; Grossman et al, 2019; Jackson et al, 2022; Kurokawa et al, 2022; Martini et al, 2021; Zverev et al, 2017), with the assumption that taller/larger plant individuals or species with higher abundance are visually more apparency for herbivores. In contrast, the associational resistance hypothesis predicts that neighbors matter, and species diversity among neighbors dilutes the herbivore and provides resistance to herbivory (Atsatt & Odowd, 1976; Barbosa et al, 2009). The negative density dependence hypothesis argues that herbivory should increase with conspecific plant density (Janzen, 1970; Janzen et al, 1976).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The species composition of both plants and herbivores changes considerably with elevation; therefore, the patterns observed in individual plant species may not reflect the elevational changes in the role of herbivory in mountain ecosystems (Zvereva et al, 2022 ). Nevertheless, most studies of elevational gradients in herbivory are conducted on a single plant species (reviewed by Moreira et al, 2018 ), whereas community‐wide studies are rare (but see De Long et al, 2016 ; Descombres et al, 2020 ; Martini et al, 2021 ; Metcalfe et al, 2014 ; Zvereva et al, 2022 ). Community‐wide estimates are essential for understanding the consequences of herbivory on plant community structure and ecosystem functioning (Anstett et al, 2016 ); consequently, comparisons between species‐specific and community‐wide approaches taken to quantify herbivory patterns within the same elevational gradient are critically required to learn whether the elevational patterns in herbivory observed for individual plant species can be extrapolated to the entire plant community.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%