Abstract
We used comparative methods that account for the phylogenetic correlations among species to test hypotheses about the community of gall-inducing insects on dicotyledonous and monocotyledonous plants and woody and herbaceous angiosperms in the UK. We found that the species richness of gall-inducing insects on dicots was greater than on monocots and that the odds of a dicot having an associated gall-inducing insect is 42% higher than for a monocot. Woody angiosperms have higher species richness of associated gall-inducing insects than do herbaceous angiosperms. Furthermore, using a Monte Carlo analysis we found that attacks by gall-inducing insects on monocot families were phylogenetically clustered in the order Poales, particularly within the grass family Poaceae. We suggest that the higher risk of attack on dicots and higher species richness of gall-inducing insects on woody angiosperms, which are exclusively dicots, arises because of differences in the abundance or susceptibility of dicot meristems to attack by gall-inducing insects. Architectural and anatomical differences between monocots and dicots that give rise to differences in meristem abundance and anatomy appear to play an important role in determining the occurrence and richness of associated gall-inducing insects on host plants.
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