1. Spatial variation in abiotic and biotic factors creates local contexts that influence the intensity of plant‐herbivore interactions. Some previous studies have accounted for the complexity of these interactions with latitudinal clines, while the absence of such clines in many other systems suggests other, often unknown, local community factors may instead explain the variation in herbivory across populations. 2. We investigated plant‐herbivore interactions across the entire range of a long‐lived tree (Quercus garryana), evaluating the relative importance of climate, latitude, population size, and insect feeding guilds in determining leaf phenotype and the extent and variation in insect herbivory. In this ecosystem, rain shadows create a...
<div><p>High-latitude plants are often more palatable to herbivores than low-latitude conspecifics. ...
Interactions between plants and herbivores are central in most ecosystems, but their strength is hig...
1. Associational resistance theory predicts that insect herbivory decreases with increasing tree div...
1. Spatial variation in abiotic and biotic factors creates local contexts that influence the intensi...
1. Spatial variation in abiotic and biotic factors creates local contexts that influence the intensi...
Spatial variation in abiotic and biotic factors creates local contexts that influence the intensity ...
A long-standing paradigm in ecology holds that herbivore pressure and thus plant defences increase t...
Background and Aims Classic theory on geographical gradients in plant–herbivore interactions assumes...
Premise : Abiotic factors and plant species traits have been shown to drive latitudinal gradients in...
How plant traits evolve along geographical and climatic gradients has recently received increased at...
1.Associational resistance theory predicts that insect herbivory decreases with increasing tree dive...
Plant distributions are expected to shift in response to climate change, and range expansion dynamic...
The longstanding biotic interactions hypothesis predicts that herbivore pressure declines with latit...
Interactions between plants and herbivores are central in most ecosystems, but their strength is hig...
<div><p>High-latitude plants are often more palatable to herbivores than low-latitude conspecifics. ...
Interactions between plants and herbivores are central in most ecosystems, but their strength is hig...
1. Associational resistance theory predicts that insect herbivory decreases with increasing tree div...
1. Spatial variation in abiotic and biotic factors creates local contexts that influence the intensi...
1. Spatial variation in abiotic and biotic factors creates local contexts that influence the intensi...
Spatial variation in abiotic and biotic factors creates local contexts that influence the intensity ...
A long-standing paradigm in ecology holds that herbivore pressure and thus plant defences increase t...
Background and Aims Classic theory on geographical gradients in plant–herbivore interactions assumes...
Premise : Abiotic factors and plant species traits have been shown to drive latitudinal gradients in...
How plant traits evolve along geographical and climatic gradients has recently received increased at...
1.Associational resistance theory predicts that insect herbivory decreases with increasing tree dive...
Plant distributions are expected to shift in response to climate change, and range expansion dynamic...
The longstanding biotic interactions hypothesis predicts that herbivore pressure declines with latit...
Interactions between plants and herbivores are central in most ecosystems, but their strength is hig...
<div><p>High-latitude plants are often more palatable to herbivores than low-latitude conspecifics. ...
Interactions between plants and herbivores are central in most ecosystems, but their strength is hig...
1. Associational resistance theory predicts that insect herbivory decreases with increasing tree div...