# Stand Diversity Does Not Mitigate Increased Herbivory on Climate‐Matched Oaks in an Assisted Migration Experiment

**Authors:** Juri A. Felix, Philip C. Stevenson, Nadia Barsoum, Julia Koricheva

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/pce.15383 · Plant, Cell & Environment · 2025-01-13

## TL;DR

This study finds that planting climate-matched Italian oaks increases herbivory compared to local oaks, and mixing tree species does not reduce this damage.

## Contribution

The study reveals that assisted migration of oaks increases herbivory and that stand diversity does not mitigate this effect.

## Key findings

- Italian oaks experienced more herbivory than local oaks regardless of stand diversity.
- Tree apparency and light availability influenced herbivory and leaf traits.
- Stand diversity did not reduce herbivory on climate-matched oaks.

## Abstract

Assisted migration is a tree‐planting method where tree species or populations are translocated with the aim of establishing more climate‐resilient forests. However, this might potentially increase the susceptibility of translocated trees to herbivory. Stand diversification through planting trees in species or genotypic mixtures may reduce the amount of damage by insect pests, but its effectiveness in mitigation of excess herbivory on climate‐matched trees has seldom been explored. Using the Climate Match Experiment which manipulates both tree climatic provenance and stand diversity, we compared growth, insect herbivory and leaf traits of pedunculate oaks (Quercus robur) of local and Italian provenances in monocultures, provenance mixtures or species mixtures. Additionally, we investigated whether tree apparency and light availability cause variation in leaf traits and herbivory and tested whether these factors were influenced by stand diversity. We found that Italian oaks were subject to greater herbivore damage than those of local English provenance regardless of stand diversity and that insect herbivory in Italian oaks was higher on more apparent trees. Italian oaks also had lower concentrations of hydrolysable tannins than English oaks, but tannin concentrations were poor predictors of herbivory. Additionally, we show that leaf trait variation is strongly associated with differences in light availability.

This study explores the interactive effects of assisted migration and stand diversification on leaf traits and herbivory using a tree diversity experiment in Southern England. Oaks of Italian provenance received more herbivory than oaks of the local provenance, revealing a potential downside of assisted migration. Increasing neighbourhood diversity did not mitigate higher herbivory. Additionally, light availability significantly affected oak leaf traits; however, this did not explain variation in herbivory.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Quercus robur (taxon 38942)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Quercus robur (English oak, species) [taxon 38942]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

88 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11963489/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11963489