Autores
Bret D Elderd, Brian J Rehill, Kyle J Haynes, Greg Dwyer
Fecha de publicación
2013/9/10
Revista
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volumen
110
Número
37
Páginas
14978-14983
Editor
National Academy of Sciences
Descripción
Cyclic outbreaks of defoliating insects devastate forests, but their causes are poorly understood. Outbreak cycles are often assumed to be driven by density-dependent mortality due to natural enemies, because pathogens and predators cause high mortality and because natural-enemy models reproduce fluctuations in defoliation data. The role of induced defenses is in contrast often dismissed, because toxic effects of defenses are often weak and because induced-defense models explain defoliation data no better than natural-enemy models. Natural-enemy models, however, fail to explain gypsy moth outbreaks in North America, in which outbreaks in forests with a higher percentage of oaks have alternated between severe and mild, whereas outbreaks in forests with a lower percentage of oaks have been uniformly moderate. Here we show that this pattern can be explained by an interaction between induced …
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Artículos de Google Académico
BD Elderd, BJ Rehill, KJ Haynes, G Dwyer - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013