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Journal ArticleDOI

Relationship between plant development, tannin concentration and insects associated with Copaifera langsdorffii (Fabaceae)

TLDR
The present study reveals an ontogenetic succession pattern for herbivore insects along the C. langsdorffii growth, probably due to both indirect and direct benefits from the host plant architecture and quality.
Abstract
Plant development is the main factor that determines the insect-ontogeny interaction, since it leads to variations in resource quality and availability. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that plant development and varying tannin concentration leads to changes in species richness, abundance and composition of ants, free-feeding herbivores and galling insects associated with Copaifera langsdorffii (Fabaceae). The plant ontogeny and tannin concentration effects on insects were tested on 60 individuals with height varying from 0.9 to 11.0 m. A positive correlation was observed for tree height and species richness and abundance of ants, free-feeding and galling insects. In contrast, we did not find a significant relation between leaf tannin concentration and plant height, or richness and abundance of the different insect guilds. The assemblage of ants (composition of species) did not change between saplings and adults of C. langsdorffii. However, the assemblage of free-feeding herbivores and galling insects varied between the two development stages studied. The present study reveals an ontogenetic succession pattern for herbivore insects along the C. langsdorffii growth, probably due to both indirect and direct benefits from the host plant architecture and quality. Those plants with more complex architectures should support a wider diversity of insects, since they present higher number of sites for egg laying, housing, feeding and better environmental conditions. This is the first work to investigate the host plant ontogeny effect on insects in Cerrado “Savanna” vegetation. The pattern described, along with other previous studies, suggests a vast occurrence of ontogenetic succession in tropical areas.

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Seed Size as Key Factor in Germination and Seedling Development of Copaifera langsdorffii (Fabaceae)

TL;DR: It is argued that high variability in seed size of C. langsdorffii favors its widespread geographic distribution because it favors the colonization of transient habitats and the seedling establishment in more stable habitats.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cerrado vegetation types determine how land use impacts ant biodiversity

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated how conversion of three types of native Cerrado vegetation (open grassland, typical savanna, and woodland savanna) to two human-managed land uses (Eucalyptus plantations and pastures) affects ant richness and composition in arboreal, epigaeic, and hypogaeic ant communities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contrasting effects of sampling scale on insect herbivores distribution in response to canopy structure

TL;DR: Investigation of how forest canopy structure affects insect herbivore species richness and abundance depending on feeding guilds' specificities found a found pattern of feeding specialization, resources availability, and agility.
References
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Journal Article

Past: paleontological statistical software package for education and data analysis

TL;DR: PAST (PAleontological STatistics) as discussed by the authors is a simple-to-use software package for executing a range of standard numerical analysis and operations used in quantitative paleontology.
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Non-parametric multivariate analyses of changes in community structure

TL;DR: Which elements of this often-quoted strategy for graphical representation of multivariate (multi-species) abundance data have proved most useful in practical assessment of community change resulting from pollution impact are identified.
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Resource Availability and Plant Antiherbivore Defense

TL;DR: Resource availability in the environment is proposed as the major determinant of both the amount and type of plant defense, and theories on the evolution of plant defenses are compared with other theories.
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Herbivory in relation to plant nitrogen content

TL;DR: The evidence that N is scarce and perhaps a limiting nutrient for many herbivores, and that in response to this selection pressure, many Herbivores have evolved specific behavioral, morphological, physiological, and other adaptations to cope with and uti­ lize the ambient N levels of their normal haunts is examined.
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Carbon/nutrient balance of boreal plants in relation to vertebrate herbivory

TL;DR: Fundamental differences between the response of woody plants and graminoids to vertebrate herbivory suggest that the dynamics of browsing systems and grazing systems are qualitatively different.