Authors
Sofia Gripenberg, Yves Basset, Owen T Lewis, J Christopher D Terry, S Joseph Wright, Indira Simon, D Catalina Fernandez, Marjorie Cedeño‐Sanchez, Marleny Rivera, Héctor Barrios, John W Brown, Osvaldo Calderon, Anthony I Cognato, Jorma Kim, Scott E Miller, Geoffrey E Morse, Sara Pinzón‐Navarro, Donald LJ Quicke, Robert K Robbins, Juha‐Pekka Salminen, Eero Vesterinen
Publication date
2019/10
Journal
Ecology Letters
Volume
22
Issue
10
Pages
1638-1649
Description
The top‐down and indirect effects of insects on plant communities depend on patterns of host use, which are often poorly documented, particularly in species‐rich tropical forests. At Barro Colorado Island, Panama, we compiled the first food web quantifying trophic interactions between the majority of co‐occurring woody plant species and their internally feeding insect seed predators. Our study is based on more than 200 000 fruits representing 478 plant species, associated with 369 insect species. Insect host‐specificity was remarkably high: only 20% of seed predator species were associated with more than one plant species, while each tree species experienced seed predation from a median of two insect species. Phylogeny, but not plant traits, explained patterns of seed predator attack. These data suggest that seed predators are unlikely to mediate indirect interactions such as apparent competition between …
Total citations
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