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Risk of bird predation and defoliating insect abundance are greater in urban forest fragments than street trees

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Citation

Lawrence C. Long, and Steven Frank, Risk of bird predation and defoliating insect abundance are greater in urban forest fragments than street trees: Urban Ecosystems (2020).

Summary

Abstract (from SpringerLink) Predation by natural enemies is important for regulating herbivore abundance and herbivory. Theory predicts that complex habitats support more natural enemies, which exert top-down control over arthropods and therefore can reduce herbivory. However, it is unclear if theory developed in other more natural systems similarly apply to predation by vertebrate and invertebrate natural enemies across urban habitats of varying complexity. We used plasticine caterpillar models to assess risk of predation by birds and insects, collected leaf-feeding arthropods, and measured herbivory in willow oak trees (Quercus phellos) in two seasons to determine how predation influenced herbivory across urban forest fragments, [...]

Contacts

Author :
Lawrence C. Long, Steven Frank
Funding Agency :
Southeast CASC

Attached Files

Communities

  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Southeast CASC

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Additional Information

Citation Extension

journalUrban Ecosystems (2020)
parts
typeDOI
value10.1007/s11252-020-00939-x

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