
Effects of experimental warming at the microhabitat scale on oak leaf traits and insect herbivory across a contrasting environmental gradient
- Author
- Xoaquín Moreira, Luis Abdala‐Roberts, Beatriz Lago‐Núñez, Ana Cao, Karen De Pauw (UGent) , Annelore De Ro (UGent) , Cristina Gasperini, Per‐Ola Hedwall, Giovanni Iacopetti, Jonathan Lenoir, Camille Meeussen, Jan Plue, Pieter Sanczuk (UGent) , Federico Selvi, Fabien Spicher, An Vanden Broeck and Pieter De Frenne (UGent)
- Organization
- Project
-
- FORMICA (Microclimatic buffering of plant responses to macroclimate warming in temperate forests)
- Abstract
- Forest microclimatic variation can result in substantial temperature differences at local scales with concomitant impacts on plant defences and herbivory. Such microclimatic effects, however, may differ across abiotically contrasting sites depending on background environmental differences. To test these cross-scale effects shaping species ecological and evolutionary responses, we experimentally tested the effects of aboveground microhabitat warming on insect leaf herbivory and leaf defences (toughness, phenolic compounds) for saplings of sessile oak Quercus petraea across two abiotically contrasting sites spanning 9(degrees) latitude. We found higher levels of herbivory at the low-latitude site, but leaf traits showed mixed patterns across sites. Toughness and condensed tannins were higher at the high-latitude site, whereas hydrolysable tannins and hydroxycinnamic acids were higher at the low-latitude site. At the microhabitat scale, experimental warming increased herbivory, but did not affect any of the measured leaf traits. Condensed tannins were negatively correlated with herbivory, suggesting that they drive variation in leaf damage at both scales. Moreover, the effects of microhabitat warming on herbivory and leaf traits were consistent across sites, i.e. effects at the microhabitat scale play out similarly despite variation in factors acting at broader scales. These findings together suggest that herbivory responds to both microhabitat (warming) and broad-scale environmental factors, whereas leaf traits appear to respond more to environmental factors operating at broad scales (e.g. macroclimatic factors) than to warming at the microhabitat scale. In turn, leaf secondary chemistry (tannins) appears to drive both broad-scale and microhabitat-scale variation in herbivory. Further studies are needed using reciprocal transplants with more populations across a greater number of sites to tease apart plant plasticity from genetic differences contributing to leaf trait and associated herbivory responses across scales and, in doing so, better understand the potential for dynamics such as local adaptation and range expansion or contraction under shifting climatic regimes.
- Keywords
- latitudinal variation, microclimate, phenolic compounds, plant-herbivore interactions, Quercus petraea, saplings, LATITUDINAL PATTERNS, CHEMICAL DEFENSES, PLANT-RESPONSES, CATERPILLARS, TEMPERATURE, INCREASES, EVOLUTION, PRESSURE, IMPACTS, TANNINS
Downloads
-
Oikos - 2023 - Moreira - Effects of experimental warming at the microhabitat scale on oak leaf traits and insect herbivory.pdf
- full text (Published version)
- |
- open access
- |
- |
- 606.79 KB
Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-01HGDMVKWS4CG1FXC32JVDZHTK
- MLA
- Moreira, Xoaquín, et al. “Effects of Experimental Warming at the Microhabitat Scale on Oak Leaf Traits and Insect Herbivory across a Contrasting Environmental Gradient.” OIKOS, vol. 2024, no. 1, 2024, doi:10.1111/oik.10353.
- APA
- Moreira, X., Abdala‐Roberts, L., Lago‐Núñez, B., Cao, A., De Pauw, K., De Ro, A., … De Frenne, P. (2024). Effects of experimental warming at the microhabitat scale on oak leaf traits and insect herbivory across a contrasting environmental gradient. OIKOS, 2024(1). https://doi.org/10.1111/oik.10353
- Chicago author-date
- Moreira, Xoaquín, Luis Abdala‐Roberts, Beatriz Lago‐Núñez, Ana Cao, Karen De Pauw, Annelore De Ro, Cristina Gasperini, et al. 2024. “Effects of Experimental Warming at the Microhabitat Scale on Oak Leaf Traits and Insect Herbivory across a Contrasting Environmental Gradient.” OIKOS 2024 (1). https://doi.org/10.1111/oik.10353.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Moreira, Xoaquín, Luis Abdala‐Roberts, Beatriz Lago‐Núñez, Ana Cao, Karen De Pauw, Annelore De Ro, Cristina Gasperini, Per‐Ola Hedwall, Giovanni Iacopetti, Jonathan Lenoir, Camille Meeussen, Jan Plue, Pieter Sanczuk, Federico Selvi, Fabien Spicher, An Vanden Broeck, and Pieter De Frenne. 2024. “Effects of Experimental Warming at the Microhabitat Scale on Oak Leaf Traits and Insect Herbivory across a Contrasting Environmental Gradient.” OIKOS 2024 (1). doi:10.1111/oik.10353.
- Vancouver
- 1.Moreira X, Abdala‐Roberts L, Lago‐Núñez B, Cao A, De Pauw K, De Ro A, et al. Effects of experimental warming at the microhabitat scale on oak leaf traits and insect herbivory across a contrasting environmental gradient. OIKOS. 2024;2024(1).
- IEEE
- [1]X. Moreira et al., “Effects of experimental warming at the microhabitat scale on oak leaf traits and insect herbivory across a contrasting environmental gradient,” OIKOS, vol. 2024, no. 1, 2024.
@article{01HGDMVKWS4CG1FXC32JVDZHTK, abstract = {{Forest microclimatic variation can result in substantial temperature differences at local scales with concomitant impacts on plant defences and herbivory. Such microclimatic effects, however, may differ across abiotically contrasting sites depending on background environmental differences. To test these cross-scale effects shaping species ecological and evolutionary responses, we experimentally tested the effects of aboveground microhabitat warming on insect leaf herbivory and leaf defences (toughness, phenolic compounds) for saplings of sessile oak Quercus petraea across two abiotically contrasting sites spanning 9(degrees) latitude. We found higher levels of herbivory at the low-latitude site, but leaf traits showed mixed patterns across sites. Toughness and condensed tannins were higher at the high-latitude site, whereas hydrolysable tannins and hydroxycinnamic acids were higher at the low-latitude site. At the microhabitat scale, experimental warming increased herbivory, but did not affect any of the measured leaf traits. Condensed tannins were negatively correlated with herbivory, suggesting that they drive variation in leaf damage at both scales. Moreover, the effects of microhabitat warming on herbivory and leaf traits were consistent across sites, i.e. effects at the microhabitat scale play out similarly despite variation in factors acting at broader scales. These findings together suggest that herbivory responds to both microhabitat (warming) and broad-scale environmental factors, whereas leaf traits appear to respond more to environmental factors operating at broad scales (e.g. macroclimatic factors) than to warming at the microhabitat scale. In turn, leaf secondary chemistry (tannins) appears to drive both broad-scale and microhabitat-scale variation in herbivory. Further studies are needed using reciprocal transplants with more populations across a greater number of sites to tease apart plant plasticity from genetic differences contributing to leaf trait and associated herbivory responses across scales and, in doing so, better understand the potential for dynamics such as local adaptation and range expansion or contraction under shifting climatic regimes. }}, articleno = {{e10353}}, author = {{Moreira, Xoaquín and Abdala‐Roberts, Luis and Lago‐Núñez, Beatriz and Cao, Ana and De Pauw, Karen and De Ro, Annelore and Gasperini, Cristina and Hedwall, Per‐Ola and Iacopetti, Giovanni and Lenoir, Jonathan and Meeussen, Camille and Plue, Jan and Sanczuk, Pieter and Selvi, Federico and Spicher, Fabien and Vanden Broeck, An and De Frenne, Pieter}}, issn = {{0030-1299}}, journal = {{OIKOS}}, keywords = {{latitudinal variation,microclimate,phenolic compounds,plant-herbivore interactions,Quercus petraea,saplings,LATITUDINAL PATTERNS,CHEMICAL DEFENSES,PLANT-RESPONSES,CATERPILLARS,TEMPERATURE,INCREASES,EVOLUTION,PRESSURE,IMPACTS,TANNINS}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{1}}, pages = {{10}}, title = {{Effects of experimental warming at the microhabitat scale on oak leaf traits and insect herbivory across a contrasting environmental gradient}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.1111/oik.10353}}, volume = {{2024}}, year = {{2024}}, }
- Altmetric
- View in Altmetric
- Web of Science
- Times cited: