Despite predictions that herbivorous insects should selectively attack high
-density host populations, research suggests that different herbivores may
exhibit very different responses to host density. I surveyed natural and ex
perimentally planted populations of common ragwort (Senecio jacobaea) for a
variety of herbivorous insects. Early and late instar cinnabar moth (Tyria
jacobaeae) larvae differed significantly in their incidence patterns on th
e experimental arrays, with young caterpillars most prevalent on closely sp
aced hosts, and older caterpillars on more widely spaced plants. The differ
ence suggests opposite density biases may apply to maternal oviposition and
larval dispersal behaviours. Two other herbivores (the leaf miner Chromato
myia syngenesiae and the flowerhead boring Botanophila spp.) showed signifi
cant biases towards low density hosts in the experimental plantings. In nat
ural populations. another leaf miner, Liriomyza strigata, preferentially at
tacked low-density plants, whilst C. syngenesiae incidence was highest at i
ntermediate host densities. The difference between natural and experimental
populations suggests a difference between colonisation dynamics and longer
-term population effects. I review and contrast six possible explanations f
or the diversity of density responses found amongst herbivores in this and
other comparable studies. Most are at least qualitatively consistent with t
he patterns observed here, and thus require additional research to differen
tiate.