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Journal ArticleDOI

The abundance of invertebrate herbivores in relation to the availability of nitrogen in stressed food plants.

T. C. R. White
- 01 Jul 1984 - 
- Vol. 63, Iss: 1, pp 90-105
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TLDR
It has been postulated that when plants are stressed by certain changes in patterns of weather they become a better source of food for invertebrate herbivores because this stress causes an increase in the amount of nitrogen available in their tissues for young herbivore feeding on them.
Abstract
It has previously been postulated that when plants are stressed by certain changes in patterns of weather they become a better source of food for invertebrate herbivores because this stress causes an increase in the amount of nitrogen available in their tissues for young herbivores feeding on them. And this may cause outbreaks of such phytophagous invertebrates. Evidence is now presented that a similar physiological mechanism appears to operate when a wide variety of apparently unrelated environmental factors impinge on plants or parts of plants in such a way as to perturb their metabolism. A broken branch, lightning strike, fire, nutrient deficiencies or an otherwise adverse site; all may have this effect. With the advent of modern man the available agencies increase and diversify to include pesticides, irradiation and air pollutants. One common metabolic response by plants to all such agents impinging on them seems to be equivalent to that found in senescing plant tissues — the breakdown and mobilization of nitrogen in soluble form away from the senescing/stressed tissues. Young herbivores which chance to feed on such stressed/senescing tissues have a greater and more readily available supply of nitrogen in their food than they would have had if feeding on unstressed plants. As a result many more of them survive, and there is an increase in abundance of their kind. Such increases may be quite localised and short-lived or more widespread and persistent, depending on the extent and duration of the stress experienced by the plants. And in the face of this improved nutrition and survival of the very young, predators and parasites seem to have only a minor influence on subsequent changes in abundance of their herbivorous prey. Another effect of increased mobilization of nitrogen in stressed plants is an increase in the quantity of the seed that they set. This has led to the conclusion that increased abundance of some species of birds at such times is due to a greater supply of seeds as winter food for recent fledglings. But it may be that the increased abundance is due to the synchronous increase in phytophagous insects providing a richer source of protein food for laying hens and growing nestlings.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The dilemma of plants: To grow or defend.

TL;DR: A conceptual model of the evolution of plant defense is concluded, in which plant physioligical trade-offs interact with the abiotic environment, competition and herbivory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of plant survival and mortality during drought: why do some plants survive while others succumb to drought?

TL;DR: A hydraulically based theory considering carbon balance and insect resistance that allowed development and examination of hypotheses regarding survival and mortality was developed, and incorporating this hydraulic framework may be effective for modeling plant survival andortality under future climate conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolutionary ecology of the relationship between oviposition preference and performance of offspring in phytophagous insects

TL;DR: Understanding of the relationships between oviposition preference and growth, survival, and reproduction of offspring is hampered by an almost complete lack of data on how preference and performance are related genetically.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Plant Vigor Hypothesis and Herbivore Attack

Peter W. Price
- 01 Nov 1991 - 
TL;DR: Four sources of evidence are used to support the Plant Vigor Hypothesis that many herbivore species feed preferentially on vigorous plants or plant modules, as opposed to the Plant Stresshypothesis arguing that stressed plants ae beneficial to herbivores.
Journal ArticleDOI

The disturbance of forest ecosystems: the ecological basis for conservative management

TL;DR: A review of the literature on natural disturbance in forests can be found in this paper, where the authors argue that disturbance is a major force moulding the development, structure and function of forests and that management of forests for all their benefits can be controlled so that the effects can be contained within those which result from natural disturbance.
References
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Book

Responses of plants to environmental stresses

J. Levitt
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the responses of plants to environmental stresses and found that plants respond to environmental stress in response to various types of stressors, such as drought and flooding.
Journal ArticleDOI

The importance of a relative shortage of food in animal ecology

TL;DR: The hypothesis proposes that animals live in a variably inadequate environment wherein many are born but few survive, and leads to a concept of populations being “limited from below” rather than “controlled from above”.
Journal ArticleDOI

An index to measure weather-induced stress of trees associated with outbreaks of Psyllids in Australia

T. C. R. White
- 01 Sep 1969 - 
TL;DR: It is postulated that physiological stress of plants at these times increased the amount of nitrogeneous food available to the psyllids, thus greatly increasing the chances of young surviving and reproducing.