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Changes in needle quality and larch bud moth performance in response to CO 2 enrichment and defoliation of treeline larches
Author(s) -
Asshoff Roman,
Hättenschwiler Stephan
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
ecological entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.865
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1365-2311
pISSN - 0307-6946
DOI - 10.1111/j.0307-6946.2006.00756.x
Subject(s) - larch , biology , sugar , horticulture , larva , botany , zoology , biochemistry
.  1. It is hypothesised that the larch bud moth cycle is controlled by host‐tree foliage quality. In a Free Air CO 2 Enrichment (FACE) experiment at the Swiss alpine treeline (2180 m a.s.l.), the effects of elevated CO 2 and previous year defoliation on needle quality of larch and the performance of the larch bud moth were investigated. 2. Starch and lignin concentrations increased and water content decreased in elevated CO 2 ‐grown needles compared with ambient CO 2 concentration. Defoliation resulted in reduced N, water, starch, and sugar concentrations in needles of the next year generation. No interactions between elevated CO 2 and defoliation on needle quality were observed. 3. Needle quality changes due to needle maturation over the course of the experiment, however, were much larger than the effects of elevated CO 2 and defoliation. For example, N concentration was on average 38% lower and lignin concentration 55% higher at the end of the experiment (early July 2003) than at the beginning (mid June 2003). 4. On non‐defoliated trees, larch bud moth larvae grew somewhat more slowly under elevated CO 2 compared with ambient CO 2 concentration. If, however, trees had been defoliated, this response was reversed, with a faster growth of larch bud moth on high CO 2 ‐exposed trees than on control trees. Pupal weight was not affected by either CO 2 treatment or defoliation. 5. These results suggest that the larch bud moth has to cope with large changes in food quality due to needle maturation during its development, and that additional CO 2 ‐ and defoliation‐induced alterations in needle chemistry have comparatively minor influences on larch bud moth performance at the treeline.

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