Abstract
Abstract. 1. Secondary colonization of leaf shelters constructed by caterpillars has been reported from a number of systems. Both the mechanism (larval or adult movement vs. oviposition) and the cues used by arthropods in locating leaf shelters, however, have received little attention.2. Artificial leaf shelters (i.e. leaf ties or pairs of leaves clipped together to form sandwiches) were constructed on understorey white oak (Quercus alba L.) trees and the abundance and species composition of arthropods colonizing and ovipositing on leaf pairs was examined in three treatments: occupied leaf ties (containing a leaf‐tying caterpillar), unoccupied leaf ties, and non‐tied control leaves.3. The density of arthropods present in the occupied and unoccupied leaf ties after two weeks was seven and four times greater respectively, than non‐tied controls. The guild composition of these early colonists differed among treatments, with the highest densities of leaf chewers, scavengers, and predators in occupied ties and the lowest densities in non‐tied controls.4. The densities of all arthropods ovipositing on leaf pairs in the occupied and unoccupied leaf tie treatments were four and three times greater than non‐tied controls. Leaf‐chewing insects (including leaf‐tiers and non‐tying inquiline species) and scavengers showed strong oviposition preferences for tied leaves. However, most species of leaf‐tying caterpillars and the psocids (Psocoptera) did not distinguish between occupied and unoccupied ties, suggesting that these groups do not use occupancy‐related cues in selecting oviposition sites.
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