1981
DOI: 10.2307/2425147
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Mortality and Area Reduction in Leaves of the Bog Shrub Chamaedaphne calyculata (Ericaceae) Caused by the Leaf Miner Coptodisca kalmiella (Lepidoptera: Heliozelidae)

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Cited by 19 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Adult leafminers should lay eggs on leaves that are large enough for the larvae to complete their life histories (Dai et al., 2011). Therefore, many leafminers prefer larger leaves to smaller ones (Faeth, 1991; Hileman & Lieto, 1981). In contrast, plant phylogenetic isolation, life history, interspecific competition, and natural enemies had no important impacts on the number of agromyzid flies on the British Umbelliferae (Lawton & Price, 1979).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Adult leafminers should lay eggs on leaves that are large enough for the larvae to complete their life histories (Dai et al., 2011). Therefore, many leafminers prefer larger leaves to smaller ones (Faeth, 1991; Hileman & Lieto, 1981). In contrast, plant phylogenetic isolation, life history, interspecific competition, and natural enemies had no important impacts on the number of agromyzid flies on the British Umbelliferae (Lawton & Price, 1979).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such preferences are usually presumed to be for sun ( (23), or larger leaves are simply preferred (88,165). Larger leaves may increase probability of survival of single larvae (23), but may also increase density of mines (25, 124, 183); communal mines have been sug gested to be an adaptation for exploiting larger leaves (25).…”
Section: Distribution Of Mines and Minersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Different leaf-mining depths thus have different impacts on leaf hydraulics, gas exchange, water use and chlorophyll fluorescence (Johnson et al, 1983;Parrella et al, 1985;Trumble et al, 1985;Kappel, 1986;Raimondo et al, 2003Raimondo et al, , 2013Pincebourde et al, 2006;Bueno et al, 2007;Wagner et al, 2008;Lombardini et al, 2013). However, the wholeplant photosynthetic loss from most leaf miners is slight because insect populations are small in natural vegetation (Hileman & Lieto, 1981;Nardini et al, 2004) and the photosynthetic loss does not extend beyond the mined leaf area (Lombardini et al, 2013;Raimondo et al, 2013). While in some economic plants, photosynthesis is negatively correlated with leaf miner density and injury leaf area (Fujiie, 1982;Johnson et al, 1983;Lombardini et al, 2013).…”
Section: Impacts On Plant Physiologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Leaf miner outbreaks have strong negative influences on plant development and aboveground biomass production: more basal sprout dieback, lower plant height, lower girth, smaller leave size, fewer leaf number, fewer petiole number, and fewer shoot number (Trumble et al, 1985;Norris, 1997;Kozlov, 2005;Wagner & Doak, 2013). Leaf-mining injury could cause severe loss of the total leaf area (Hileman & Lieto, 1981;Peña et al, 2000;Nardini et al, 2004). Leaf miners markedly increased the mortality of floral leaves, but not of vegetative leaves (Hileman & Lieto, 1981).…”
Section: Impacts On Plant Growth and Productionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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