4.7 Article

Phenols in Leaves and Bark of Fagus sylvatica as Determinants of Insect Occurrences

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INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES
卷 12, 期 5, 页码 2769-2782

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms12052769

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Fagus sylvatica; entomofauna; phenolics; secondary plant chemistry; insect traps; clustering; discriminant analysis

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Beech forests play an important role in temperate and north Mediterranean ecosystems in Greece since they occupy infertile montane soils. In the last glacial maximum, Fagus sylvatica (beech) was confined to Southern Europe where it was dominant and in the last thousand years has expanded its range to dominate central Europe. We sampled four different beech forest types. We found 298 insect species associated with beech trees and dead beech wood. While F. sylvatica and Quercus (oak) are confamilial, there are great differences in richness of the associated entomofauna. Insect species that inhabit beech forests are less than one fifth of those species living in oak dominated forests despite the fact that beech is the most abundant central and north European tree. There is a distinct paucity of monophagous species on beech trees and most insect species are shared between co-occurring deciduous tree species and beech. This lack of species is attributed to the vegetation history and secondary plant chemistry. Bark and leaf biophenols from beech indicate that differences in plant secondary metabolites may be responsible for the differences in the richness of entomofauna in communities dominated by beech and other deciduous trees.

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