Plant Ecology - Chapter 11 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Plant Ecology - Chapter 11

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Estimate - 10% of leaves of forest trees eaten each year ... Chestnut blight - fungal canker disease, kills cambium under bark ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Plant Ecology - Chapter 11


1
Plant Ecology - Chapter 11
  • Herbivory Pathogens

2
Herbivory
  • The consumption of all or part of a living plant
  • A predator when it kills and eats an individual

3
Herbivory
  • Granivores - eat seeds or grains
  • Grazers - eat grasses, low-growing plants
  • Browsers - eat leaves from trees, shrubs
  • Frugivores - eat fruits

4
Herbivory
  • How much do they eat?
  • Estimate - 10 of leaves of forest trees eaten
    each year
  • Least in temperate forest, most in dry tropical
    forest

5
Is herbivory good for a plant?
  • Reduce self-shading
  • Remove leaves in excess of optimum LAI
  • Reduce respiratory drag on plant

6
Herbivory can cause death
  • Girdling (ring-barking) of young trees by
    rabbits, squirrels, and rodents

7
Herbivory can cause death
  • Introduction of disease into plant by grazer
  • Dutch elm disease
  • Fungus carried by elm bark beetle
  • Clogs circulatory system of American elm trees

8
Herbivory can cause death
  • Grazing on one species may be sufficient to sway
    competitive interaction in favor of another
    species

9
Herbivory can cause death
  • Large populations of fluid-suckers (e.g., aphids)
    can virtually stop growth and/or kill a plant

10
Herbivory can affect survival
  • Repeated defoliation often required to kill
    mature plant
  • Large proportion of seedlings killed by single
    attack
  • But some seedling plants have high tolerance -
    e.g., 75 survival after 5 defoliations

11
Herbivory can affect growth
  • Effects range from none to total cessation of
    growth
  • Depends on
  • Timing of defoliation
  • Type of plant involved (grasses most tolerant
    because of basal meristem rather than apical
    meristem)

12
Herbivory can affect fecundity
  • Grazed plants tend to be smaller and bear fewer
    seeds
  • Herbivory can delay flowering (move it into
    inhospitable season), reduce, or totally inhibit
    flowering
  • Some eat flowers, fruits, and seeds and reduce
    fecundity

13
Good herbivores
  • Some pollen-eaters help pollinate
  • Some fruit-eaters help distribute seeds
  • Some seed-eaters store seeds in ground and forget
    them
  • Mutualistic relationships

14
Compensation for herbivory
  • Temporarily mobilize stored carbohydrates until
    regrowth returns photosynthesis to normal

15
Compensation for herbivory
  • Reroute photosynthetic products to damaged areas
    to enhance regrowth
  • To roots, or shoot, or leaves

16
Compensation for herbivory
  • Increase rate of photosynthesis in remaining leaf
    surface area

17
Compensation for herbivory
  • Stimulate dormant buds to grow, or reduce death
    rate among surviving parts
  • Despite all these possible mechanisms,
    compensation is rarely perfect, so plants are
    harmed in the long-term

18
Compensation for herbivory
19
Defensive responses to grazers
  • Grow bigger, sharper spines

20
Defensive responses to grazers
  • Produce more or new defensive chemicals

21
Defensive responses to grazers
  • Reduce palatability
  • Tougher
  • More fiber
  • Lower nitrogen content

22
Effect of grazing on whole population of plants
  • Do they only prey on the weak?
  • Reduction in intraspecific competition
  • Can reduce high LAI to more optimal levels and
    improve plant productivity
  • Typically only works in high-density populations
    little or no compensation in low-density
    populations

23
Effect of grazing on whole population of plants
  • Controversial and unresolved
  • Two explanations on why herbivores are NOT
    important regulators of plant populations
  • Top-down
  • Bottom-up

24
Effect of grazing on whole population of plants
  • Top-down - herbivores usually at such low
    densities because of their predators, cannot have
    negative effects on entire plant population

25
Effect of grazing on whole population of plants
  • Bottom-up - plant populations are limited by
    abiotic factors (light, water, nutrients), not by
    herbivores

26
Effect of grazing on whole population of plants
  • On the other hand, there are some various obvious
    examples of population control by herbivores -
    e.g., gypsy moths and oaks

27
Effect of grazing on whole population of plants
  • Another example - bark beetles and conifers -
    widespread mortality in N. Amer.

28
Effect of grazing on plant distribution
  • Eating can limit distribution in some areas, or
    rodent/squirrel caches can enhance abundance

29
Biological control
  • Moth introduced into Australia to kill invasive
    prickly pear cactus - good there, but problems
    elsewhere

30
Biological control
  • Beetles introduced to control purple loosestrife

31
Herbivory communities
  • Vertebrate, invertebrate grazers can have
    dramatic effects on plant communities

32
Herbivory communities
  • E.g., rabbits and grasslands of southern England

33
Herbivory communities
  • Native and introduced grazers can have
    significant profound effects

34
Herbivory communities
  • Large herbivores in Yellowstone

35
Parasitic Plants
  • Obligate parasitic plants - obtain energy,
    nutrients, water from host plant
  • E.g., mistletoes

36
Parasitic Plants
  • Hemiparasites - independent and photosynthetic,
    or parasite on other plants (e.g., roots)

37
Plant Pathogens
  • Fungi, water molds, bacteria, viruses cause
    diseases in plants
  • Individual, population, and community effects

38
Plant Pathogens
  • Soybean rust - fungus from Asia, infects leaves
  • Survives only on green tissue (eliminated each
    fall here, but kudzu in south is infested)

39
Plant Pathogens
  • Citrus canker - bacterium causes premature leaf,
    fruit drop

40
Plant Pathogens
  • Smuts - affect flowers, are caused by fungi
  • Sexually transmitted

41
Plant Pathogens
  • Chestnut blight - fungal canker disease, kills
    cambium under bark
  • American chestnut formerly dominated plant
    communities

42
Plant Pathogens - people
  • Irish potato famine resulted from potato blight
    caused by water mold
  • Destroyed Irish potato crop in 1840s

43
Plant Pathogens - people
  • 1 million people died from famine and disease
  • 1 million emigrated to U.S., Canada (especially
    New York, Boston)

44
Plant Pathogens - people
  • Population of Ireland has not recovered
  • Remnants of former potato farms remain today

45
Plant defense against pathogens
  • Phytoalexins - secondary chemicals produced at
    site of infection to kill microbes
  • Phloem plugging - phloem clogs in response to
    damage, prevents spread of infection through
    vascular system
  • Localized tissue death - barrier to infection
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