Canopy height, rather than neighbourhood effects, shapes leaf herbivory
in a tropical rainforest
- Shuang Zhang,
- Guorui Xu,
- Yuxin Zhang,
- Min Cao,
- Wenfu Zhang
Shuang Zhang
Research Centre for Eco-Environmental Sciences Chinese Academy of Sciences
Corresponding Author:shuangzhang@rcees.ac.cn
Author ProfileGuorui Xu
Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Author ProfileYuxin Zhang
Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Acedemy of Sciences
Author ProfileMin Cao
Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Author ProfileWenfu Zhang
Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Author ProfileAbstract
Factors shaping the interspecific variations in herbivory have puzzled
ecologists for decades and several hypotheses have been proposed. In a
tropical rain forest in Yunnan Province, China, we collected 6,732
leaves from 129 species with canopy heights ranging from 1.6 m to 65.0 m
above the ground. We tested the role of plant apparency, leaf traits and
the diversity, composition and structural heterogeneity of neighbors in
shaping the interspecific variations in herbivory. Results show that
leaf herbivory decreased with canopy height and specific leaf area and
increased with leaf size. However, neighboring species' diversity,
composition, and structural heterogeneity showed no association with
herbivory. Therefore, neither the plant apparency hypothesis nor the
associational resistance hypothesis was supported in this hyper-diverse
tropical rainforest. Our results highlight the importance of vertical
structures and organic sizes in shaping herbivory patterns in natural
communities.