4.8 Article

Plant-herbivore interactions and ecological stoichiometry: when do herbivores determine plant nutrient limitation?

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 4, Issue 3, Pages 196-206

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1461-0248.2001.00210.x

Keywords

herbivory; stoichiometry; nutrient cycling; nutrient limitation

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Recent studies on plant-herbivore indirect interactions via nutrient recycling have led to the hypothesis that herbivores with a low nitrogen: phosphorus ratio, feeding on plants with a higher nitrogen: phosphorus ratio, recycle relatively more nitrogen, driving plants into phosphorus limitation. We demonstrate in this paper that such a hypothesis is valid only under restricted conditions, i.e. the nitrogen: phosphorus ratio of inorganic nutrients supplied to the system must be neither too high nor too low compared with the nitrogen: phosphorus ratio of the whole plant + herbivore biomass. If plants have a greater affinity for phosphorus than for nitrogen, low herbivore nitrogen: phosphorus ratio can even promote nitrogen limitation. These results are qualitatively robust, whether grazing functions are donor-controlled or recipient-controlled. We present a graphical analysis of these conditions based on the Zero Net Growth Isocline method.

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