Environmental gradients have been postulated to generate patterns of diversity and diet specialization, in which more stable environments, such as tropical regions, should promote higher diversity and specialization. Using field sampling and phylogenetic analyses of butterfly fauna over an entire alpine region, we show that butterfly specialization (measured as the mean phylogenetic distance between utilized host plants) decreases at higher elevations, alongside a decreasing gradient of plant diversity. Consistent with current hypotheses on the relationship between biodiversity and the strength of species interactions, we experimentally show that a higher level of generalization at high elevations is associated with lower levels of plant resistance: across 16 pairs of plant species, low-elevation plants were more resistant vis-à-vis their congeneric alpine relatives. Thus, the links between diversity, herbivore diet specialization, and plant resistance along an elevation gradient suggest a causal relationship analogous to that hypothesized along latitudinal gradients.
Shifts in species richness, herbivore specialization, and plant resistance along elevation gradients
L. Pellissier,K. Fiedler,Charlotte Ndribe,A. Dubuis,Jean‐Nicolas Pradervand,A. Guisan,S. Rasmann
Published 2012 in Ecology and Evolution
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2012
- Venue
Ecology and Evolution
- Publication date
2012-07-01
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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