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Latitudinal variation in plant–herbivore interactions in European salt marshes
Author(s) -
Pennings Steven C.,
Zimmer Martin,
Dias Natália,
Sprung Martin,
Davé Nilam,
Ho ChuanKai,
Kunza Amy,
McFarlin Caroline,
Mews Malte,
Pfauder Anett,
Salgado Cristiano
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
oikos
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.672
H-Index - 179
eISSN - 1600-0706
pISSN - 0030-1299
DOI - 10.1111/j.0030-1299.2007.15591.x
Subject(s) - herbivore , latitude , palatability , salt marsh , biology , ecology , geography , food science , geodesy
Ecological interactions often vary geographically. Work in salt marshes on the Atlantic Coast of the United States has documented community‐wide latitudinal gradients in plant palatability and plant traits that may be driven in part by greater herbivore pressure at low latitudes. To determine if similar patterns exist elsewhere, we studied six taxa of saltmarsh plants ( Atriplex , Juncus , Limonium , Salicornia , Spartina and Suaeda ) at European sites at high (Germany and the Netherlands) and low (Portugal and Spain) latitudes. We conducted feeding assays using both native and non‐native consumers, and documented patterns of herbivore damage in the field. As in the United States, high‐latitude plants tended to be more palatable than low‐latitude plants when offered to consumers in paired feeding assays in the laboratory, although assays with grasshopper consumers were less consistent than those with crab consumers, and plants in the field at low‐latitude sites tended to experience greater levels of herbivore pressure than plants at high‐latitude sites. Similarly, high‐latitude leaf litter was more palatable than litter from low‐latitude plants when offered to consumers in paired feeding assays in the laboratory. Latitudinal gradients in plant palatability and herbivore pressure may be a general phenomenon, and may contribute to latitudinal gradients in decomposition processes.