Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/15353
Title: Changes in leaf chlorophyll content associated with flowering and its role in the diversity of phytophagous insects in a tree species from a semiarid Caatinga
Authors: Sousa-Souto, Leandro
Bocchiglieri, Adriana
Dias, Douglas De Matos
Ferreira, Anthony S.
Lemos-Filho, José Pires de
Keywords: Arboreal Species
Beetle
Caatinga
Chlorophyll Content
Diptera
Fabaceae
Flowering
Genetic Variability
Hemiptera
Hymenoptera
Leaf Chlorophyll Index
Leaf Tissue
Morpho-species
Nonhuman
Nutritional Status
Nutritional Value
Plant Leaf
Plant Parameters
Plant Pest
Poincianella Pyramidalis
Sibinia Hirritus
Species Diversity
Species Richness
Tree
Issue Date: 2018
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: PeerJ
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 2018, Número 6
Abstract: Phytophagous insects choose their feeding resources according to their own requirements, but their feeding preferences in the semiarid Caatinga have rarely been studied. Flowering trees leads to a greater diversity of flower visitors and their predators in the host plant, but little is known about why the diversity of phytophagous insects not associated with flowers is also increased. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the diversity of sap-sucking, wood-boring and leaf-chewing insects associated with leaf chlorophyll content in flowering and non-flowering plants of Poincianella pyramidalis, an endemic tree of Caatinga. We used a leaf chlorophyll index (LCI) as a surrogate for resource quality, and an entomological umbrella to collect phytophagous insects. We show that trees which bloomed demonstrated higher chlorophyll content, greater abundance and a significant difference in the composition of phytophagous insect species when compared to non-flowering trees (p < 0:05). The results suggest that not only the presence of flowers themselves, but also the higher nutritional quality of leaf tissue, can explain the differences in species diversity and abundance of phytophagous insects. Exceptional flowering trees in the Caatinga area studied may thus act as spots of high quality resources, favouring changes in the diversity of insects in this environment. © 2018 Sousa-Souto et al.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.7717/peerj.5059
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