“…Secondly, leaf herbivory can differentially suppress and limit the stature of potential host tree species (in height or leaf area), especially if they lack sufficient resistance, or fail to compensate for eaten tissues, or cannot escape discovery by density dependent natural enemies (Pearson, Burslem, Goeriz, & Dalling, ; Marquis, ; Massey, Massey, Press, & Hartley, ; Norghauer, Malcolm, & Zimmerman, ; Norghauer & Newbery, ; Lemoine, Burkepile, & Parker, ). If vines can distinguish among and grow toward dark, shaded areas cast by very small stems (<1 cm) of taller seedlings with more leaves, not unlike the skototropism demonstrated for root climbers of buttressed tropical trees (Strong & Ray, ) and other hosts (Gianoli, ), then herbivory could reduce host susceptibility to vine colonization in gaps. Thirdly, although vines can compete with their hosts for light and belowground resources (Schnitzer, Kuzee, & Bongers, ; Toledo‐Aceves & Swaine, ; Toledo‐Aceves & Swaine, ; Alvarez‐Cansino, Schnitzer, Reid, & Powers, ), there is evidence from temperate systems of associational effects benefiting the fitness of the vine (Gonzalez‐Tueber & Gianoli, ) or host plant (Sasal & Suarez, ).…”