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Herbivory on the pedunculate oak along urbanization range in Europe: effects of local forest cover and insect feeding guild
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  • Elena Valdés-Correcher,
  • Anna Popova,
  • Andrea Galmán,
  • Andreas Prinzing,
  • Andrey Selikhovkin,
  • Andy Howe,
  • Anna Mrazova,
  • Anne-Maïmiti Dulaurent,
  • Arndt Hampe,
  • Ayco Tack,
  • Christophe Bouget,
  • Daniela Lupaștean,
  • Deborah Harvey,
  • Dmitry Musolin,
  • Gabor Lövei,
  • Giada Centenaro,
  • Inge Halder,
  • Jonas Hagge,
  • Jovan Dobrosavljević,
  • Juha-Matti Pitkänen,
  • Julia Koricheva,
  • Katerina Sam,
  • Luc Barbaro,
  • Manuela Branco,
  • Marco Ferrante,
  • Maria Faticov,
  • Markéta Tahadlová,
  • Martin M. Gossner,
  • Maxime Cauchoix,
  • Michał Bogdziewicz,
  • Mihai-Leonard Duduman,
  • Mikhail Kozlov,
  • Mona Bjoern,
  • Nikita Mamaev,
  • Pilar Fernandez-Conradi,
  • Rebecca Thomas,
  • Ross Wetherbee,
  • Samantha Green,
  • Slobodan Milanović,
  • Xoaquin Moreira,
  • Yasmine Kadiri,
  • Bastien Castagneyrol
Elena Valdés-Correcher
INRAE Nouvelle-Aquitaine Bordeaux Centre

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Anna Popova
Russian Academy of Sciences
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Andrea Galmán
Martin Luther University Halle Wittenberg
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Andreas Prinzing
ECOBIO
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Andrey Selikhovkin
Saint Petersburg State Forest Technical University named after S M Kirov
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Andy Howe
University of Copenhagen
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Anna Mrazova
Biology Centre Czech Academy of Sciences
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Anne-Maïmiti Dulaurent
UniLaSalle
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Arndt Hampe
INRAE Nouvelle-Aquitaine Bordeaux Centre
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Ayco Tack
Stockholm University
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Christophe Bouget
INRAE Val de Loire Site de Nogent-sur-Vernisson
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Daniela Lupaștean
University of Suceava
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Deborah Harvey
Royal Holloway University of London School of Biological Sciences
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Dmitry Musolin
Saint Petersburg State Forest Technical University named after S M Kirov
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Gabor Lövei
Aarhus Universitet
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Giada Centenaro
Stockholm University
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Inge Halder
INRAE Nouvelle-Aquitaine Bordeaux Centre
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Jonas Hagge
Northwest German Forest Research Institute
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Jovan Dobrosavljević
University of Belgrade
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Juha-Matti Pitkänen
Natural Resources Institute Finland
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Julia Koricheva
Royal Holloway University of London School of Biological Sciences
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Katerina Sam
Institute of Entomology Biology Centre Czech Academy of Sciences
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Luc Barbaro
DYNAFOR
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Manuela Branco
Universidade de Lisboa
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Marco Ferrante
University of the Azores - Angra do Heroísmo Campus
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Maria Faticov
Stockholm University
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Markéta Tahadlová
Biology Centre CAS
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Martin M. Gossner
WSL
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Maxime Cauchoix
CNRS
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Michał Bogdziewicz
Adam Mickiewicz University
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Mihai-Leonard Duduman
University of Suceava
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Mikhail Kozlov
University of Turku
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Mona Bjoern
University of Copenhagen
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Nikita Mamaev
Saint Petersburg State Forest Technical University named after S M Kirov
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Pilar Fernandez-Conradi
URFM
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Rebecca Thomas
University of Reading
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Ross Wetherbee
Norwegian University of Life Sciences
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Samantha Green
Coventry University
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Slobodan Milanović
University of Belgrade
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Xoaquin Moreira
Mision Biologica de Galicia
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Yasmine Kadiri
INRAE Nouvelle-Aquitaine Bordeaux Centre
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Bastien Castagneyrol
INRAE Nouvelle-Aquitaine Bordeaux Centre
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Abstract

Urbanization is recognized as an important driver of the diversity and abundance of tree associated insect herbivores, but its consequences for insect herbivory are controversial. A likely source of variability among studies is the insufficient consideration of intra-urban variability in forest cover. With the help of citizen scientists, we investigated the independent and interactive effect of urbanization and local canopy cover on insect herbivory in the pedunculate oak (Quercus robur) throughout most of its geographic range in Europe. The damage caused by chewing insect herbivores as well as the incidence of leaf-mining and gall-inducing herbivores consistently decreased with increasing urbanization around focal oaks. Herbivory by chewing herbivores increased with increasing forest cover, regardless of urbanization. In contrast, an increase in local canopy cover buffered the negative effect of urbanization on leaf-miners and strengthened its effect on gall-inducers. These results show the complexity of plant-herbivore interactions in urbanized areas, highlighting that the presence of local canopy cover within cities has the potential to attenuate or modify the effect of urbanization on biotic interactions.
21 Oct 2021Submitted to Ecology and Evolution
29 Oct 2021Submission Checks Completed
29 Oct 2021Assigned to Editor
03 Nov 2021Reviewer(s) Assigned
19 Nov 2021Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
02 Dec 2021Editorial Decision: Revise Minor
25 Jan 20221st Revision Received
25 Jan 2022Submission Checks Completed
25 Jan 2022Assigned to Editor
25 Jan 2022Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
01 Feb 2022Reviewer(s) Assigned
17 Feb 2022Editorial Decision: Accept