Authors
Anne Kempel, Martin Schädler, Thomas Chrobock, Markus Fischer, Mark van Kleunen
Publication date
2011/4/5
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
108
Issue
14
Pages
5685-5689
Publisher
National Acad Sciences
Description
Several prominent hypotheses have been posed to explain the immense variability among plant species in defense against herbivores. A major concept in the evolutionary ecology of plant defenses is that tradeoffs of defense strategies are likely to generate and maintain species diversity. In particular, tradeoffs between constitutive and induced resistance and tradeoffs relating these strategies to growth and competitive ability have been predicted. We performed three independent experiments on 58 plant species from 15 different plant families to address these hypotheses in a phylogenetic framework. Because evolutionary tradeoffs may be altered by human-imposed artificial selection, we used 18 wild plant species and 40 cultivated garden-plant species. Across all 58 plant species, we demonstrate a tradeoff between constitutive and induced resistance, which was robust to accounting for phylogenetic history of …
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Scholar articles
A Kempel, M Schädler, T Chrobock, M Fischer… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011