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Seeing the forest for the trees: long‐term exposure to elevated CO 2 increases some herbivore densities
Author(s) -
STILING PETER,
MOON DANIEL,
ROSSI ANTHONY,
HUNGATE BRUCE A.,
DRAKE BERT
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
global change biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.146
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1365-2486
pISSN - 1354-1013
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2009.01902.x
Subject(s) - herbivore , litter , biology , plant litter , abundance (ecology) , canopy , botany , horticulture , agronomy , ecology , nutrient
The effects of elevated CO 2 on plant growth and insect herbivory have been frequently investigated over the past 20 years. Most studies have shown an increase in plant growth, a decrease in plant nitrogen concentration, an increase in plant secondary metabolites and a decrease in herbivory. However, such studies have generally overlooked the fact that increases in plant production could cause increases of herbivores per unit area of habitat. Our study investigated leaf production, herbivory levels and herbivore abundance per unit area of leaf litter in a scrub‐oak system at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, under conditions of ambient and elevated CO 2 , over an 11‐year period, from 1996 to 2007. In every year, herbivory, that is leafminer and leaftier abundance per 200 leaves, was lower under elevated CO 2 than ambient CO 2 for each of three species of oaks, Quercus myrtifolia, Quercus chapmanii and Quercus geminata . However, leaf litter production per 0.1143 m 2 was greater under elevated CO 2 than ambient CO 2 for Q. myrtifolia and Q. chapmanii , and this difference increased over the 11 years of the study. Leaf production of Q. geminata under elevated CO 2 did not increase. Leafminer densities per 0.1143 m 2 of litterfall for Q. myrtifolia and Q. chapmanii were initially lower under elevated CO 2 . However, shortly after canopy closure in 2001, leafminer densities per 0.1143 m 2 of litter fall became higher under elevated CO 2 and remained higher for the remainder of the experiment. Leaftier densities per 0.1143 m 2 were also higher under elevated CO 2 for Q. myrtifolia and Q. chapmanii over the last 6 years of the experiment. There were no differences in leafminer or leaftier densities per 0.1143 m 2 of litter for Q. geminata . These results show three phenomena. First, they show that elevated CO 2 decreases herbivory on all oak species in the Florida scrub‐oak system. Second, despite lower numbers of herbivores per 200 leaves in elevated CO 2 , increased leaf production resulted in higher herbivore densities per unit area of leaf litter for two oak species. Third, they corroborate other studies which suggest that the effects of elevated CO 2 on herbivores are species specific, meaning they depend on the particular plant species involved. Two oak species showed increases in leaf production and herbivore densities per 0.1143 m 2 in elevated CO 2 over time while another oak species did not. Our results point to a future world of elevated CO 2 where, despite lower plant herbivory, some insect herbivores may become more common.

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