2010
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-010-1606-4
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Leaf miner and plant galler species richness on Acacia: relative importance of plant traits and climate

Abstract: Diversity patterns of herbivores have been related to climate, host plant traits, host plant distribution and evolutionary relationships individually. However, few studies have assessed the relative contributions of a range of variables to explain these diversity patterns across large geographical and host plant species gradients. Here we assess the relative influence that climate and host plant traits have on endophagous species (leaf miners and plant gallers) diversity across a suite of host species from a g… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(42 citation statements)
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References 67 publications
(111 reference statements)
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“…The multiple climatic factors combined with the various plant traits, however, make it difficult to test directly this hypothesis using a biogeographical climatic gradient (Bairstow et al, 2010). Indeed, humidity seems to play an important and confounding role in setting the richness of gallers and miners, with greater species richness in xeric and mesic environments for gallers and miners, respectively (Bairstow et al, 2010). This effect of humidity likely depends on thermal context, so an extension of our framework is required to test these hypotheses.…”
Section: Temperaturementioning
confidence: 96%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The multiple climatic factors combined with the various plant traits, however, make it difficult to test directly this hypothesis using a biogeographical climatic gradient (Bairstow et al, 2010). Indeed, humidity seems to play an important and confounding role in setting the richness of gallers and miners, with greater species richness in xeric and mesic environments for gallers and miners, respectively (Bairstow et al, 2010). This effect of humidity likely depends on thermal context, so an extension of our framework is required to test these hypotheses.…”
Section: Temperaturementioning
confidence: 96%
“…Indeed, in insects in general, anoxia tolerance may be a central feature of metabolic cold adaptation (Hodkinson and Bird, 2004). The multiple climatic factors combined with the various plant traits, however, make it difficult to test directly this hypothesis using a biogeographical climatic gradient (Bairstow et al, 2010). Indeed, humidity seems to play an important and confounding role in setting the richness of gallers and miners, with greater species richness in xeric and mesic environments for gallers and miners, respectively (Bairstow et al, 2010).…”
Section: Temperaturementioning
confidence: 98%
“…High incidences and abundances of leafminers on dominant plants have been demonstrated at global, regional, and community levels (Dai et al., 2017). For example, the highest reported abundance and richness values of leaf‐mining insects are found for members of Fagaceae and Myrtaceae (i.e., the most dominant plant families in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, respectively) (Bairstow, Clarke, McGeoch, & Andrew, 2010; Claridge & Wilson, 1982; Dai, Xu, & Cai, 2014; Dai, Xu, & Ding, 2013; Faeth & Mopper, 1981; Ishida, Hattori, & Kimura, 2004; Kollár & Hrubík, 2009; Lopez‐Vaamonde, Godfray, & Cook, 2003; Nakamura, Hattori, Ishida, Sato, & Kimura, 2008; Opler & Davis, 1981; Sato, 1991; Sinclair & Hughes, 2008a,b). The variation in leafminer species richness among different host plants might be described by the species–area (i.e., leafminer species to host plant area) or species–apparency (i.e., leafminer species to host plant apparency) relationship (Dai et al., 2017; MacArthur & Wilson, 1967; Opler, 1974).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For most extant endophytic feeding, it is well known that many insect species make single, distinct DTs on single host species at a site [1], [5], [9], [14], [15]. However, external feeders (leaf-chewers; Figs.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%