Herbivory and defensive characteristics of tree species in a lowland tropical forest

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Publication Type Journal Article
School or College College of Science
Department Biology
Creator Coley, Phyllis D.
Title Herbivory and defensive characteristics of tree species in a lowland tropical forest
Date 1983
Description Rate of herbivory and defensive characteristics of young and mature leaves were measured for saplings of 46 canopy tree species in a lowland tropical rain forest (Barro Colorado Island, Panama). Grazing rates were determined in the field for sample periods in the early wet, late wet, and dry seasons. Leaf properties such as pubescence, toughness, water, protein, fiber, and phenolic contents explained over 70% of the variation among plant species in the rates of herbivory on mature leaves. Leaf toughness was most highly correlated with levels of herbivory, followed by fiber content and nutritive value. Phenol content and phenol : protein ratios were not significantly correlated with damage.
Type Text
Publisher Ecological Society of America
Volume 53
Issue 2
First Page 209
Last Page 233
Subject Fiber; Herbivory; Life history; Panama; Phenolics; Plant growth; Spatial distribution; Tannins; Temporal distribution; Treefall gaps; Tropical forest
Subject LCSH Forest ecology -- Tropics; Plant defenses
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Coley, P. D. (1983). Herbivory and defensive characteristics of tree species in a lowland tropical forest. Ecological Monographs, 53(2), 209-33.
Rights Management (c) Ecological Society of America
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 2,132,391 bytes
Identifier ir-main,6745
ARK ark:/87278/s6cr6bnf
Setname ir_uspace
ID 703868
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6cr6bnf
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