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« Previous AbstractAromas Influencing the GABAergic System    Next AbstractThe inhibition of phenolic biosynthesis in damaged and undamaged birch foliage and its effect on insect herbivores »

Oecologia


Title:"Effects of different types of damage on the chemistry of birch foliage, and the responses of birch feeding insects"
Author(s):Hartley SE; Lawton JH;
Address:"Department of Biology, University of York, YO1 5DD, Heslington, York, UK"
Journal Title:Oecologia
Year:1987
Volume:74
Issue:3
Page Number:432 - 437
DOI: 10.1007/BF00378941
ISSN/ISBN:1432-1939 (Electronic) 0029-8549 (Linking)
Abstract:"1. We collected insect-grazed, mined, and holepunched leaves of Betula pendula Roth, and assessed their palatability to four species of birch-feeding lepidopteran caterpillars (Apocheima pilosaria D. & S., Erranis defolaria Clerck, Epirrita dilutata D. & S., and Euproctis similis Fuessly) in laboratory preference tests. The palatability of hole-punched leaves of different ages was also determined, using Apocheima pilosaria only. 2. The total phenolic content and protein-precipitating ability of undamaged and all three types of damaged leaves was measured, together with the water content of mined, insect-grazed and undamaged leaves. 3. Only the mined leaves were consistently avoided in the feeding trials; the other sorts of damage were often preferred by the caterpillars, even though phenolic levels increased in all the damaged leaves. The insects appeared either to be indifferent to changes in the protein-precipitating ability of leaves, or actually preferred leaves showing the largest increase. 4. The results show clear qualitative as well as quantitative differences in birch's response to different types of damage. They also show that herbivore preferences depend upon both the damage type and the species of insect being tested. Preferences are difficult or impossible to relate to changes in phenolic levels, or to the protein-precipitating ability of leaves. The possible consequences of these results for 'induced defense' theory are discussed"
Keywords:Betula Food-choice Geometridae Leaf-damage Phenolics;
Notes:"PubMed-not-MEDLINEHartley, S E Lawton, J H eng Germany 1987/12/01 Oecologia. 1987 Dec; 74(3):432-437. doi: 10.1007/BF00378941"

 
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