Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10869406 | Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2013 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Fossil plant-insect associations (PIAs) such as herbivory and pollination have become increasingly relevant to paleobiology and biology. Researchers studying fossil PIAs now employ procedures for assuring unbiased representation of field specimens, use of varied analytical quantitative techniques, and address ecological and evolutionarily important issues. For herbivory, the major developments are: Late Silurian-Middle Devonian (ca. 420-385Â Maa) origin of herbivory; Late Pennsylvanian (318-299Â Ma) expansion of herbivory; Permian (299-252Â Ma) herbivore colonization of new habitats; consequences of the end-Permian (252Â Ma) global crisis; early Mesozoic (ca. 235-215Â Ma) rediversification of plants and herbivores; end-Cretaceous (66.5Â Ma) effects on extinction; and biological effects of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) (55.8Â Ma). For pollination, salient issues include: Permian pollination evidence; the plant hosts of mid-Mesozoic (ca. 160-110Â Ma) long-proboscid pollinators; and effect of the angiosperm revolution (ca. 125-90Â Ma) on earlier pollinator relationships. Multispecies interaction studies, such as contrasting damage types with insect diversity and establishing robust food webs, expand the compass and relevance of past PIAs.
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Authors
Conrad C Labandeira,