Journal
OIKOS
Volume 88, Issue 2, Pages 371-379Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1034/j.1600-0706.2000.880216.x
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To assess the combined effect of herbivory, nutrient availability and plant phenology on plant mass and defensive chemistry, we conducted a field experiment with plantain (Plantago lanceolata: Plantaginaceae) using three levels of herbivory, three levels of fertilizer and two harvest dates. Shoot mass of the no-herbivory plants showed a nonlinear response to increased fertilizer such that mass with high fertilizer was no greater than that with low fertilizer. In contrast, shoot mass of the low-herbivory plants (12% damage) was nor influenced by fertilizer, but for high-herbivory plants (23% damage), there was a positive linear response to increased fertilizer. Increasing nutrient levels caused a decrease in iridoid glycoside concentration. Herbivory did not induce higher iridoid glycoside concentration in leaves of any age. But increasing herbivory, resulted in a decrease in the concentration of catalpol in new leaves. Another experiment assessed how leaf age and plant ape affected plant defensive chemistry. Total iridoid glycosides increased over 5 weeks, but catalpol only Increased in new leaves. Overall. the order of importance in determining variation in iridoid glycoside concentration was plant phenology, nutrient availability and, to a much lesser extent, herbivory.
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