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      Four ways towards tropical herbivore megadiversity.

      1 ,
      Ecology letters
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Most multicellular species alive are tropical arthropods associated with plants. Hence, the host-specificity of these species, and their diversity at different scales, are keys to understanding the assembly structure of global biodiversity. We present a comprehensive scheme in which tropical herbivore megadiversity can be partitioned into the following components: (A) more host plant species per se, (B) more arthropod species per plant species, (C) higher host specificity of herbivores, or (D) higher species turnover (beta diversity) in the tropics than in the temperate zone. We scrutinize recent studies addressing each component and identify methodological differences among them. We find substantial support for the importance of component A, more tropical host species. A meta-analysis of published results reveals intermediate to high correlations between plant and herbivore diversity, accounting for up to 60% of the variation in insect species richness. Support for other factors is mixed, with studies too scarce and approaches too uneven to allow for quantitative summaries. More research on individual components is unlikely to resolve their relative contribution to overall herbivore diversity. Instead, we call for the adoption of more coherent methods that avoid pitfalls for larger-scale comparisons, for studies assessing different components together rather than singly, and for studies that investigate herbivore beta-diversity (component D) in a more comprehensive perspective.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Ecol Lett
          Ecology letters
          Wiley
          1461-0248
          1461-023X
          Apr 2008
          : 11
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Laboratório Interações Insetos-Plantas, Depto. Zoologia, IB, UNICAMP, Campinas 13083-970, São Paulo, Brazil. thomasl@unicamp.br
          Article
          ELE1155
          10.1111/j.1461-0248.2008.01155.x
          18248447
          a28d0cd5-3ea8-4296-868d-b75c7c92c6ca
          History

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