Benefits and costs of defense in a neotropical shrub

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Publication Type Journal Article
School or College College of Science
Department Biology
Creator Coley, Phyllis D.
Other Author Sagers, Cynthia L.
Title Benefits and costs of defense in a neotropical shrub
Date 1995
Description Benefits and costs are central to optimality theories of plant defense. Benefit is the gain in fitness to reducing herbivory and cost is the loss in fitness to committing resources to defense. We evaluate the benefits and costs of defense in a neotropical shrub, Psychotria horizontalis. Plants were either exposed to herbivores or protected within a cage of fine mesh in three gardens planted in large light gaps on Barro Colorado Island, Panama.
Type Text
Publisher Ecological Society of America
Volume 76
Issue 6
First Page 1835
Last Page 1843
Subject Cost of defense; Growth-defense trade-off; Exclosures; Field experiment; Herbivory; Panama; Psychotria horizontalis; Rubiaceae; Tannins; Toughness; Tropics
Subject LCSH Forest ecology -- Tropics; Plant defenses; Plant physiology
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Sagers, C. L., & Coley, P. D. (1995). Benefits and costs of defense in a neotropical shrub. Ecology, 76(6), 1835-43.
Rights Management (c) Ecological Society of America
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 324,077 bytes
Identifier ir-main,6768
ARK ark:/87278/s6g73z91
Setname ir_uspace
ID 706432
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6g73z91
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