Can a tree protect itself if being eaten?

 

From roots to canopy, many trees can indeed tell if they are being eaten – and by whom. They have evolved extraordinary abilities to discern chewing by beetles and caterpillars, piercing and sucking by bugs, acoustic vibrations from grasshoppers, deer saliva, microbes left by various animals, even the stress signals released by nearby trees being browsed by giraffes.

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Many trees respond by making more unpalatable chemicals or growing tougher leaves. Oaks, for example, produce more tannins and phenol compounds after heavy grazing by caterpillars.

Pines, elms, acacias and many others release alarm gases that attract predators, such as parasitic wasps, to attack their enemies.

Lodgepole pines share information about mountain pine beetle infestations with neighbouring pines, and those trees react by boosting their own chemical defences. Climate stress may weaken such resilience, though.

Research shows that Aleppo pines are up to 75 per cent less able to respond to a pine weevil attack during drought.

 

Top image © Getty

Author avatar

Alex Morss

Ecologist, author and journalist

Alex Morss writes about, teaches and does ecology. She is an author of a number of books including Funny Bums, Freaky Beaks & Other Incredible Creature FeaturesWinter Sleep: A Hibernation Story and Busy Spring: Nature Wakes Up. She has also worked as an ecologist for 20 years, been a field naturalist for much longer, and worked as a journalist in many roles over three decades. Alex is particularly passionate about botany, invertebrates and bats, although she’s worked a lot with a wide range of other wildlife too. She’s also worked with a wide range of conservation charities, consultancies and science organisations.

NOTE – This article was originally published in Discover Wildlife and can be viewed here

Tags: #biodiversity, #carbon, #climatecrisis, #deforestation, #farmer, #framework, #getgreengetgrowing, #gianttrees, #gngagritech, #greenstories, #maturetrees, #trees