Abstract

AbstractFor many plant species, biotic factors determining the timing of leaf expansion have not been elucidated sufficiently. We investigated the effects of leaf damage on the timing of leaf defoliation and on the timing of leaf expansion in Mallotus japonicus (Euphorbiaceae). The degree of leaf herbivory of M. japonicus in the field was examined in summer, with subsequent investigation of the date of leaf defoliation in autumn and that of leaf expansion the following spring. Effects of artificial leaf damage on the timing of leaf defoliation and of leaf expansion were also examined in a greenhouse. In the field, the degree of leaf herbivory sustained by M. japonicus did not affect the timing of defoliation. However, the timing of leaf expansion the next spring advanced earlier, concomitantly with the increase of leaf damage during the previous year. Fifty per cent artificial leaf damage in M. japonicus saplings in summer had no marked effect on the timing of leaf defoliation in autumn. However, the effects of leaf damage on the timing of leaf expansion were apparent the following spring: the damaged plants expanded new leaves ca. 8 days earlier than control plants did. Plants that showed earlier leaf expansion tended to have a higher shoot/root ratio. Our results demonstrate that the plants advance the timing of their leaf expansion in response to leaf damage sustained during the previous year, suggesting that the shoot/root ratio is a determining factor.

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