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Arthropod and Pathogen Damage on Fossil and Modern Plants: Exploring the Origins and Evolution of Herbivory on Land

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 68, Issue -, Pages 341-361

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-ento-120120-102849

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The functional feeding group-damage type system has greatly enhanced our understanding of herbivory in fossil plant assemblages, providing valuable data on the historical patterns of plant-arthropod and pathogen interactions. It has shed light on questions regarding the oldest evidence for herbivory, the emergence of herbivore associations on land plants, and the expansion on seed plants. Furthermore, it has helped in studying the ecological crisis's impact on herbivore diversity, the formation of diverse herbivore communities on gymnosperms, and shifts in herbivory due to angiosperm diversification.
The use of the functional feeding group-damage type system for analyzing arthropod and pathogen interactions with plants has transformed our understanding of herbivory in fossil plant assemblages by providing data, analyses, and interpretation of the local, regional, and global patterns of a 420-Myr history. The early fossil record can be used to answer major questions about the oldest evidence for herbivory, the early emergence of herbivore associations on land plants, and later expansion on seed plants. The subsequent effects of the Permian-Triassic ecological crisis on herbivore diversity, the resulting formation of biologically diverse herbivore communities on gymnosperms, and major shifts in herbivory ensuing from initial angiosperm diversification are additional issues that need to be addressed. Studies of herbivory resulting from more recent transient spikes and longer-term climate trends provide important data that are applied to current global change and include herbivore community responses to latitude, altitude, and habitat. Ongoing paleoecological themes remaining to be addressed include the antiquity of modern interactions, differential herbivory between ferns and angiosperms, and origins of modern tropical forests. The expansion of databases that include a multitude of specimens; improvements in sampling strategies; development of new analytical methods; and, importantly, the ability to address conceptually stimulating ecological and evolutionary questions have provided new impetus in this rapidly advancing field.

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