Dissection of the Species-Area Relationship Among Wood-Boring Insects and Their Host Plants
- 1 July 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The American Naturalist
- Vol. 128 (1) , 35-46
- https://doi.org/10.1086/284537
Abstract
The species-area relationship between wood-boring insects and the geographic range of their host plants is derived from the tendency for wide-ranging plants to be a part of more wood-boring insect communities than plants with smaller geographic ranges. In contrast to the expectation of the area-per se hypothesis, plnats in a given forest that have large geographic ranges do not show richer wood-boring insect faunas than co-occuring plants with small ranges. The passive-sampling hypothesis can also be explored because sampling differences do not account for the pattern. Only the habitat-heterogeneity explanation for the species-area relationship is consistent with the data and analyses presented.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
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