Artículos de revistas
Infructescence size has a larger effect than light environment on the abundance of different arthropod feeding guilds dwelling on the infructescences of a terrestrial bromeliad in a xerophytic forest
Fecha
2017-09Registro en:
Montero, Guillermo; Klekailo, Graciela Noemí; Freire, Rodrigo Manuel; Torres Patricia; Cococcioni, Andrés; et al.; Infructescence size has a larger effect than light environment on the abundance of different arthropod feeding guilds dwelling on the infructescences of a terrestrial bromeliad in a xerophytic forest; Taylor & Francis Ltd; Studies on Neotropical Fauna and Environment; 52; 3; 9-2017; 216-227
0165-0521
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Montero, Guillermo
Klekailo, Graciela Noemí
Freire, Rodrigo Manuel
Torres Patricia
Cococcioni, Andrés
Barberis, Ignacio Martín
Resumen
Bromeliads are a conspicuous feature of many Neotropical xerophytic forests. Bromelia serra is an understory bromeliad living in xerophytic forests of the Humid Chaco, which shows high phenotypic plasticity when exposed to different environmental conditions. Its infructescences carry many fleshy fruits that are colonized by arthropods from different feeding guilds. We used structural equation modeling and redundancy analysis to evaluate the influences of light environment, plant size, and infructescence size on the abundance of five different feeding guilds of arthropods dwelling on the infructescences (‘fruit-secretion feeders,’ ‘infructescence-detritus feeders,’ ‘predators,’ ‘pulp feeders’ or ‘seed feeders’). Plant size was negatively associated with canopy openness, whereas infructescence size was positively associated with plant size. The abundance of all feeding guilds, except fruit-secretion feeders, were positively associated with infructescence size.