Climate affects neighbour-induced changes in leaf chemical defences and tree diversity-herbivory relationships

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Poeydebat, Charlotte | Jactel, Hervé | Moreira, Xoaquín | Koricheva, Julia | Barsoum, Nadia | Bauhus, Jürgen | Eisenhauer, Nico | Ferlian, Olga | Francisco, Marta | Gottschall, Felix | Gravel, Dominique | Mason, Bill | Muiruri, Evalyne | Muys, Bart | Nock, Charles | Paquette, Alain | Ponette, Quentin | Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael | Stokes, Victoria | Staab, Michael | Verheyen, Kris | Castagneyrol, Bastien

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley -

International audience. 1.Associational resistance theory predicts that insect herbivory decreases with increasing tree diversity in forest ecosystems. However, the generality of this effect and its underlying mechanisms are still debated, particularly since evidence has accumulated that climate may influence the direction and strength of the relationship between diversity and herbivory. 2.We quantified insect leaf herbivory and leaf chemical defences (phenolic compounds) of silver birch (Betula pendula) in pure and mixed plots with different tree species composition across twelve tree diversity experiments in different climates. We investigated whether the effects of neighbouring tree species diversity on insect herbivory in birch, i.e. associational effects, were dependent on the climatic context, and whether neighbour-induced changes in birch chemical defences were involved in associational resistance to insect herbivory.3.We showed that herbivory on birch decreased with tree species richness (i.e. associational resistance) in colder environments but that this relationship faded as mean annual temperature increased. 4.Birch leaf chemical defences increased with tree species richness but decreased with the phylogenetic distinctiveness of birch from its neighbours, particularly in warmer and more humid environments. 5.Herbivory was negatively correlated with leaf chemical defences, particularly when birch was associated with closely related species. The interactive effect of tree diversity and climate on herbivory was partially mediated by changes in leaf chemical defences. 6.Our findings demonstrate the complexity and context dependency of patterns and mechanisms underlying associational resistance to insect herbivory in mixed forests.

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