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Effects of early season defoliation ofAnthyllis cytisoides(a Mediterranean browse species) on further herbivore attack
Authors:Concepción L Alados  Fernando G Barroso  Antonio Aguirre  Juan Escós
Institution:aInstituto Pirenaico de Ecologia (CSIC), Avda. Montañana, 177, Aptdo. 202, 50080, Zaragoza, Spain;bEstación Experimental de Zonas Aridas (CSIC), General Segura, 1, Almer?́a, 04001, Spain
Abstract:To determine if defoliation of a woody plant affects foraging by folivorous insects, we examined the infection rate (number of leaves damaged per total number of leaves sampled on marked stems) ofAnthyllis cytisoidesunder three experimental treatments: 10, 50 and 90% plant defoliation. Observations were made for three age classes, established by trunk base perimeter (equal to or lower than 11 cm, between 11 and 20 cm, larger than 20 cm). Plants respond positively to artificial defoliation by increasing total vegetative length of the stem and total inflorescence length. This response is most evident in young individuals.Response to herbivory was measured as overall infection rate and also as infection rate by different feeding guilds—chewing, mining, or sucking insects. We found that increased defoliation elicited increased resistance of leaves to insect attack. This was particularly evident in young plants. Different insect guilds respond in different ways. Attack by chewing insects declines with defoliation for all plant age classes; only sucking insects which feed on the oldest plants reduce feeding rate with plant defoliation. Finally, mining insects present the opposite trend in young and senescent plants.
Keywords:Anthyllis cytisoides  herbivory  induced resistance
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