Insect herbivory on European tall-shrub species: the need to distinguish leaves before and after unfolding or unrolling, and the advantage of longitudinal sampling
Rv. Jackson et al., Insect herbivory on European tall-shrub species: the need to distinguish leaves before and after unfolding or unrolling, and the advantage of longitudinal sampling, OIKOS, 87(3), 1999, pp. 561-570
We investigated whether or not leaves of tall-shrub species show lower loss
es to herbivorous insects in the folded or rolled (FR) stage than in the un
folded or unrolled expanding (UE) stage, and support lower rates of growth
and survival of relevant insects. In a season-long field study on Cornus sa
nguinea, Euonymus europaeus, Ligustrum vulgare, Prunus spinosa and Rosa can
ina in SW-Germany we found that rates of area loss were markedly lower on F
R than UE leaves, and also lower on fully expanded, mature (M) leaves. The
prevalent herbivores were lepidopteran larvae (Croesia bergmanniana, Ectrop
is bistortata, Yponomeuta padellus). A longitudinal method of recording rev
ealed 2-3 times higher leaf-area losses than discrete sampling toward the e
nd of the season; even the ranking of the shrub species differed between lo
ngitudinal and discrete sampling. In a laboratory trial larvae of the polyp
hagous moth Ectropis bistortata (the commonest herbivore) strongly preferre
d UE leaves of Rosa canina over FR or M leaves. Also rates of survival, gro
wth and pupal weight were greatest on UE leaves, and lowest on FR leaves. I
n a field study on eleven shrub species in SE-England we sought to find rea
sons why FR leaves are less attractive and less nutritious. Leaves in the F
R stage had a significantly higher nitrogen concentration than the UE stage
, and their water content was similar. Only in five of eleven species were
the leaves hairy at the FR stage, and glabrous at the M stage. Specific lea
f area was lower in the FR stage than in the UE stage. Avoidance of FR leav
es could possibly be caused by difficulties in eating through the edges of
double-thickness laminae in folded leaves, gaining access to the leaf edge
in rolled leaves, and maintaining attachment.