Diego Fernando Campos Moreno’s research while affiliated with National University of Colombia and other places

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Publications (1)


Variation in the strength of local and regional determinants of herbivory across the Neotropics
  • Article

December 2023

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141 Reads

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1 Citation

Oikos

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Diego Fernando Campos Moreno

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Insect herbivory can be an important selective pressure and contribute substantially to local plant richness. As herbivory is the result of numerous ecological and evolutionary processes, such as complex insect population dynamics and evolution of plant antiherbivore defenses, it has been difficult to predict variation in herbivory across meaningful spatial scales. In the present work, we characterize patterns of herbivory on plants in a species‐rich and abundant tropical genus ( Piper ) across forests spanning 44° of latitude in the Neotropics. We modeled the effects of geography, climate, resource availability, and Piper species richness on the median, dispersion, and skew of generalist and specialist herbivory. By examining these multiple components of the distribution of herbivory, we were able to determine factors that increase biologically meaningful herbivory at the upper ends of the distribution (indicated by skew and dispersion). We observed a roughly twofold increase in median herbivory in humid relative to seasonal forests, which aligns with the hypothesis that precipitation seasonality plays a critical role in shaping interaction diversity within tropical ecosystems. Site level variables such as latitude, seasonality, and maximum Piper richness explained the positive skew in herbivory at the local scale (plot level) better for assemblages of Piper congeners than for a single species. Predictors that varied between local communities, such as resource availability and diversity, best explained the distribution of herbivory within sites, dampening broad patterns across latitude and climate and demonstrating why generalizations about gradients in herbivory have been elusive. The estimated population means, dispersion, and skew of herbivory responded differently to abiotic and biotic factors, illustrating the need for careful studies to explore distributions of herbivory and their effects on forest diversity.

Citations (1)


... Water and wind stress further influenced these dynamics by indirectly affecting arthropod richness via plant size and CBD levels. For any experiments focusing on the bottom-up effects of plant resources or plant stress [28] on herbivore communities, it is important to consider causal models based on existing theory and empirical studies, since complex associations between perturbations like wind stress and responses such as plant size, phytochemistry, and arthropod diversity are likely. These complex pathways can yield effects that cancel each other out and create a lack of correlation (e.g., the pathway from flood to plant size to arthropod diversity is negative, while the pathway from flood to plant size to CBD to richness is positive). ...

Reference:

Effects of Water and Wind Stress on Phytochemical Diversity, Cannabinoid Composition, and Arthropod Diversity in Hemp
Variation in the strength of local and regional determinants of herbivory across the Neotropics
  • Citing Article
  • December 2023

Oikos