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Acta Biológica Colombiana

Print version ISSN 0120-548X

Abstract

CARRILLO-HERRERA, Edgar Fernando; DZIB-EK, Susana Ariely  and  BALLINA-GOMEZ, Horacio Salomón. Influence of herbivory and gap-openness on whole-plant growth of Brosimum alicastrum (Moraceae). Acta biol.Colomb. [online]. 2021, vol.26, n.2, pp.186-195.  Epub Jan 18, 2022. ISSN 0120-548X.  https://doi.org/10.15446/abc.v26n2.83289.

Compensatory plant growth and plant defense are responses to deal with herbivory and light availability. The research focused on compensatory growth responses explained through the influence of morphological and physiological components of plant growth, allocation mass, and plant defense could clarify such process. We studied the effects of herbivory and gap-openness on compensatory growth responses, morphological and physiological components, allocation mass, and chemical defenses in seedlings of Brosimum alicastrum in a subhumid tropical forest. We used a nested design with understory and gap-openness site (n = 3 each) within each replicated site seedling belong to three herbivory treatments (n = 10 each): control, simulated, and natural; and along six months we studied the influence of leaf herbivory on plant growth (mass, leaf area, height, diameter, and leaf production) and production of phenols and leaf toughness. We recorded compensatory growth responses (all plant growth variables) with natural herbivory, subcompensatory (mass, height, and diameter) with simulated and, overcompensatory (leaf production) with natural herbivory although only under gap-openness. We found a higher leaf area ratio (LAR) and specific leaf area (SLA) (both morphological components) under gap-openness and high values of net assimilation rate (NAR) on understory. The mass proportion was highest in leaves and stems on the understory and higher in roots under gap-openness. Leafherbivory was highest under gap-openness while the phenols of the leaves on understory. We did not find a relationship (trade-off) between defense with plant growth, but it was possible to underline a negative pattern of the leaf phenols under limiting resources environment such as understory.

Keywords : growth analysis; tropical forests; defoliation; plant establishment; light penetration.

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