Abstract
On palo verde trees, nearly 80% of potential offspring were lost during flower bud development. Flower buds at the base of racemes developed earliest and were more likely to survive depredations of gelechiid larvae or abortion from putative limited resources. Herbivory accounted for greater cumulative losses than putative resources; however, an herbivore exclusion experiment suggested that buds damaged by herbivores would have aborted anyway without damage. In a natural experiment, plants that received water runoff had significantly higher densities of racemes, with only slight increases in numbers of buds, flowers, or pods per raceme. Similarly, thinning racemes experimentally to assess limited resources among potentially competing racemes increased the number of viable flower buds per raceme only slightly, with negligible herbivore damage. The production of more racemes rather than more reproductive structures per raceme may be a mechanism to allocate limited resources more efficiently. Alternatively, in studies with animals, similar patterns in the production of broods are thought to be mechanisms to avoid nest predation. Thus, while putative limited resources and resource allocation patterns reduced the proximate effects of larvae, herbivory must be considered as a possible ultimate factor in the patterns observed here because limited resources may be allocated in ways to reduce herbivory.
Published Version
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