Insect leaf-chewing damage tracks herbivore richness in modern and ancient forests.

The fossil record demonstrates that past climate changes and extinctions significantly affected the diversity of insect leaf-feeding damage, implying that the richness of damage types reflects that of the unsampled damage makers, and that the two are correlated through time. However, this relationsh...

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Main Authors: Mónica R Carvalho, Peter Wilf, Héctor Barrios, Donald M Windsor, Ellen D Currano, Conrad C Labandeira, Carlos A Jaramillo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4008375?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-953b178774224357bb39e7a9e20c2c3b2020-11-25T02:47:15ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0195e9495010.1371/journal.pone.0094950Insect leaf-chewing damage tracks herbivore richness in modern and ancient forests.Mónica R CarvalhoPeter WilfHéctor BarriosDonald M WindsorEllen D CurranoConrad C LabandeiraCarlos A JaramilloThe fossil record demonstrates that past climate changes and extinctions significantly affected the diversity of insect leaf-feeding damage, implying that the richness of damage types reflects that of the unsampled damage makers, and that the two are correlated through time. However, this relationship has not been quantified for living leaf-chewing insects, whose richness and mouthpart convergence have obscured their value for understanding past and present herbivore diversity. We hypothesized that the correlation of leaf-chewing damage types (DTs) and damage maker richness is directly observable in living forests. Using canopy access cranes at two lowland tropical rainforest sites in Panamá to survey 24 host-plant species, we found significant correlations between the numbers of leaf chewing insect species collected and the numbers of DTs observed to be made by the same species in feeding experiments, strongly supporting our hypothesis. Damage type richness was largely driven by insect species that make multiple DTs. Also, the rank-order abundances of DTs recorded at the Panamá sites and across a set of latest Cretaceous to middle Eocene fossil floras were highly correlated, indicating remarkable consistency of feeding-mode distributions through time. Most fossil and modern host-plant pairs displayed high similarity indices for their leaf-chewing DTs, but informative differences and trends in fossil damage composition became apparent when endophytic damage was included. Our results greatly expand the potential of insect-mediated leaf damage for interpreting insect herbivore richness and compositional heterogeneity from fossil floras and, equally promisingly, in living forests.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4008375?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mónica R Carvalho
Peter Wilf
Héctor Barrios
Donald M Windsor
Ellen D Currano
Conrad C Labandeira
Carlos A Jaramillo
spellingShingle Mónica R Carvalho
Peter Wilf
Héctor Barrios
Donald M Windsor
Ellen D Currano
Conrad C Labandeira
Carlos A Jaramillo
Insect leaf-chewing damage tracks herbivore richness in modern and ancient forests.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Mónica R Carvalho
Peter Wilf
Héctor Barrios
Donald M Windsor
Ellen D Currano
Conrad C Labandeira
Carlos A Jaramillo
author_sort Mónica R Carvalho
title Insect leaf-chewing damage tracks herbivore richness in modern and ancient forests.
title_short Insect leaf-chewing damage tracks herbivore richness in modern and ancient forests.
title_full Insect leaf-chewing damage tracks herbivore richness in modern and ancient forests.
title_fullStr Insect leaf-chewing damage tracks herbivore richness in modern and ancient forests.
title_full_unstemmed Insect leaf-chewing damage tracks herbivore richness in modern and ancient forests.
title_sort insect leaf-chewing damage tracks herbivore richness in modern and ancient forests.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description The fossil record demonstrates that past climate changes and extinctions significantly affected the diversity of insect leaf-feeding damage, implying that the richness of damage types reflects that of the unsampled damage makers, and that the two are correlated through time. However, this relationship has not been quantified for living leaf-chewing insects, whose richness and mouthpart convergence have obscured their value for understanding past and present herbivore diversity. We hypothesized that the correlation of leaf-chewing damage types (DTs) and damage maker richness is directly observable in living forests. Using canopy access cranes at two lowland tropical rainforest sites in Panamá to survey 24 host-plant species, we found significant correlations between the numbers of leaf chewing insect species collected and the numbers of DTs observed to be made by the same species in feeding experiments, strongly supporting our hypothesis. Damage type richness was largely driven by insect species that make multiple DTs. Also, the rank-order abundances of DTs recorded at the Panamá sites and across a set of latest Cretaceous to middle Eocene fossil floras were highly correlated, indicating remarkable consistency of feeding-mode distributions through time. Most fossil and modern host-plant pairs displayed high similarity indices for their leaf-chewing DTs, but informative differences and trends in fossil damage composition became apparent when endophytic damage was included. Our results greatly expand the potential of insect-mediated leaf damage for interpreting insect herbivore richness and compositional heterogeneity from fossil floras and, equally promisingly, in living forests.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4008375?pdf=render
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