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Dieback of rural eucalypts: Does insect herbivory relate to dietary quality of tree foliage?
Author(s) -
LANDSBERG JILL
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
australian journal of ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1442-9993
pISSN - 0307-692X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1442-9993.1990.tb01022.x
Subject(s) - herbivore , biology , eucalyptus , sugar , botany , agronomy , biochemistry
Foliar dietary quality, and the damage that insects caused to the foliage of dieback‐affected and healthy Eucalyptus blakelyi trees, were monitored for 3 years, on pastoral properties in the Australian Capital Territory. Compared with healthy trees, the foliage of dieback trees was more heavily grazed by insects, and its dietary quality was generally superior. Some of the differences in dietary quality were related to the average age of the foliage of healthy and dieback trees. But when statistical models were used to equalize the effects of differences in leaf ages, leaves on dieback trees nonetheless tended to have lower specific weights, and were sometimes rounder and contained more nitrogen. Regression analyses of herbivory against each of the dietary quality variables showed that the only significant relationship that was consistent for both of the years monitored was for foliar nitrogen and herbivory for both dieback and healthy trees. In the first year, regressions between herbivory and specific leaf weight, shape, or sugar content were also significant, but only amongst the dieback trees. This may indicate that these relationships were a response to, rather than a primary cause of, the repeated high defoliation of the dieback trees. Multiple regression equations incorporating annual means of several quality variables explained a high proportion of the variance in annual herbivory, but were grossly different between years.