Publications by authors named "Jeltje M Stam"

Article Synopsis
  • - This study investigates how interactions between perennial wild cabbage plants and herbivores during their vegetative growth may lead to lasting effects on arthropod community composition in the following reproductive season, which can impact the plants' fitness.
  • - Researchers set up experiments to see the effects of herbivory from aphids and caterpillars on plant traits like height, leaf number, and flower number, and then measured seed production in the second year to evaluate fitness.
  • - The findings suggest that the composition of herbivore communities in the first year influences predator community composition in the second year, highlighting that these legacy effects may predict plant fitness more accurately than the immediate interactions with herbivores.
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1. Plants are frequently under attack by multiple insect herbivores, which may interact indirectly through herbivore-induced changes in the plant's phenotype. The identity, order, and timing of herbivore arrivals may influence the outcome of interactions between two herbivores.

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Recent studies have shown that introduced exotic plant species may be released from their native soil-borne pathogens, but that they become exposed to increased soil pathogen activity in the new range when time since introduction increases. Other studies have shown that introduced exotic plant species become less dominant when time since introduction increases, and that plant abundance may be controlled by soil-borne pathogens; however, no study yet has tested whether these soil effects might explain the decline in dominance of exotic plant species following their initial invasiveness. Here we determine plant-soil feedback of 20 plant species that have been introduced into The Netherlands.

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Every plant is a member of a complex insect community that consists of tens to hundreds of species that belong to different trophic levels. The dynamics of this community are critically influenced by the plant, which mediates interactions between community members that can occur on the plant simultaneously or at different times. Herbivory results in changes in the plant's morphological or chemical phenotype that affect interactions with subsequently arriving herbivores.

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