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Insect Leaf-Chewing Damage Tracks Herbivore Richness in Modern and Ancient Forests

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, May 2014
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Title
Insect Leaf-Chewing Damage Tracks Herbivore Richness in Modern and Ancient Forests
Published in
PLOS ONE, May 2014
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0094950
Pubmed ID
Authors

Mónica R. Carvalho, Peter Wilf, Héctor Barrios, Donald M. Windsor, Ellen D. Currano, Conrad C. Labandeira, Carlos A. Jaramillo

Abstract

The fossil record demonstrates that past climate changes and extinctions significantly affected the diversity of insect leaf-feeding damage, implying that the richness of damage types reflects that of the unsampled damage makers, and that the two are correlated through time. However, this relationship has not been quantified for living leaf-chewing insects, whose richness and mouthpart convergence have obscured their value for understanding past and present herbivore diversity. We hypothesized that the correlation of leaf-chewing damage types (DTs) and damage maker richness is directly observable in living forests. Using canopy access cranes at two lowland tropical rainforest sites in Panamá to survey 24 host-plant species, we found significant correlations between the numbers of leaf chewing insect species collected and the numbers of DTs observed to be made by the same species in feeding experiments, strongly supporting our hypothesis. Damage type richness was largely driven by insect species that make multiple DTs. Also, the rank-order abundances of DTs recorded at the Panamá sites and across a set of latest Cretaceous to middle Eocene fossil floras were highly correlated, indicating remarkable consistency of feeding-mode distributions through time. Most fossil and modern host-plant pairs displayed high similarity indices for their leaf-chewing DTs, but informative differences and trends in fossil damage composition became apparent when endophytic damage was included. Our results greatly expand the potential of insect-mediated leaf damage for interpreting insect herbivore richness and compositional heterogeneity from fossil floras and, equally promisingly, in living forests.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Argentina 2 2%
Brazil 2 2%
Canada 1 <1%
Unknown 119 96%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Researcher 24 19%
Student > Bachelor 24 19%
Student > Master 21 17%
Student > Ph. D. Student 18 15%
Student > Doctoral Student 7 6%
Other 14 11%
Unknown 16 13%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 65 52%
Environmental Science 21 17%
Earth and Planetary Sciences 12 10%
Social Sciences 3 2%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 2 2%
Other 2 2%
Unknown 19 15%