Insect Herbivory in a Eucalyptus maculata Forest on the South Coast of New South Wales
E. W. Pook, A. M. Gill and P. H. R. Moore
Abstract
In most years between 1977 and 1992, insect defoliation was negligible in a
regrowth stand of E. maculata Hook. on the south coast
of New South Wales. However, leaf consumption by winter–spring
infestations of cup moth larvae accounted for c.
6%, 19% and 4% of the total leaf loss from the canopy in
1989–90, 1990–91 and 1991–92, respectively. During the most
serious infestation of 1990, cup moth larvae produced 0.56 t
ha–1 of frass, equivalent to the consumption of
c. 0.8 t ha–1, or
c. 0.5 m2
m–2 of eucalypt leaf (c.
12% of winter leaf area index). In early November 1990, shortly after
the infestation, an assessment of insect defoliation in the crown of a
dominant tree revealed that (i) 47% of the leaf population was damaged,
(ii) a larger proportion of older than younger leaves was damaged, (iii) the
proportion of damaged leaves increased down the tree-crown profile, and (iv)
13% of the potential leaf area was missing. In the absence of further
insect attack, the process of canopy renewal (leaf production and leaf fall)
reduced the proportion of damaged leaves to 23% by June 1991.
Australian Journal of Botany 46(6) 735 - 742 (1998) doi:10.1071/BT97016





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