Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Interaction linkages produced by plant-mediated indirect effects
- 2 Plant-mediated interactions in herbivorous insects: mechanisms, symmetry, and challenging the paradigms of competition past
- 3 Going with the flow: plant vascular systems mediate indirect interactions between plants, insect herbivores, and hemi-parasitic plants
- 4 Plant-mediated effects linking herbivory and pollination
- 5 Trait-mediated indirect interactions, density-mediated indirect interactions, and direct interactions between mammalian and insect herbivores
- 6 Insect–mycorrhizal interactions: patterns, processes, and consequences
- Part III Plant-mediated indirect effects in multitrophic systems
- Part IV Plant-mediated indirect effects on communities and biodiversity
- Part V Evolutionary consequences of plant-mediated indirect effects
- Part VI Synthesis
- Taxonomic index
- Author index
- Subject index
- References
2 - Plant-mediated interactions in herbivorous insects: mechanisms, symmetry, and challenging the paradigms of competition past
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Interaction linkages produced by plant-mediated indirect effects
- 2 Plant-mediated interactions in herbivorous insects: mechanisms, symmetry, and challenging the paradigms of competition past
- 3 Going with the flow: plant vascular systems mediate indirect interactions between plants, insect herbivores, and hemi-parasitic plants
- 4 Plant-mediated effects linking herbivory and pollination
- 5 Trait-mediated indirect interactions, density-mediated indirect interactions, and direct interactions between mammalian and insect herbivores
- 6 Insect–mycorrhizal interactions: patterns, processes, and consequences
- Part III Plant-mediated indirect effects in multitrophic systems
- Part IV Plant-mediated indirect effects on communities and biodiversity
- Part V Evolutionary consequences of plant-mediated indirect effects
- Part VI Synthesis
- Taxonomic index
- Author index
- Subject index
- References
Summary
Introduction
Interspecific interactions between insect herbivores can be either negative (competitive) or positive (facilitative) (Damman 1993, Denno et al. 1995). In the context of traditional community ecology, however, negative interactions have received the most attention (e.g., Lawton and Strong 1981, Schoener 1982, Strong et al. 1984, Denno et al. 1995) until quite recently (e.g., Lill and Marquis 2003, Nakamura et al. 2003). Nonetheless, the importance of interspecific competition as a factor structuring communities of insect herbivores has experienced a controversial history to say the least (Strong et al. 1984, Damman 1993, Denno et al. 1995). During the 1960s and 1970s, competition was revered as a central organizing force structuring communities of phytophagous insects (Denno et al. 1995). During these decades, field investigations into interspecific competition were heavily dominated by observational studies of resource partitioning as evidence for reduced competition and thus coexistence (e.g., McClure and Price 1976, Rathcke 1976, Waloff 1979). Notably, experimental field studies documenting the occurrence of interspecific competition between insect herbivores were scarce (but see McClure and Price 1975).
In the 1980s, the role of competition in structuring phytophagous insect communities was challenged severely, and within a few years it fell from a position of prominence to the status of a weak and infrequent process (Lawton and Strong 1981, Lawton 1982, Lawton and Hassell 1984, Strong et al. 1984).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Ecological CommunitiesPlant Mediation in Indirect Interaction Webs, pp. 19 - 50Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
References
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