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Beavers bite trees, benefit baby beetles.


At the first nibble Half a byte (four bits).

(data) nibble - /nib'l/ (US "nybble", by analogy with "bite" -> "byte") Half a byte. Since a byte is nearly always eight bits, a nibble is nearly always four bits (and can therefore be represented by one hex digit).
 by a plant-eating animal, many trees fight back by releasing noxious chemicals into their leaves. When a beaver chomps on a cottonwood cottonwood: see willow.
cottonwood

Any of several fast-growing North American trees of the genus Populus. Members of the willow family, cottonwoods have heart-shaped, toothed leaves and cottony seeds. The dangling leaves clatter in the wind.
, however, that strategy misfires. `The bitter compounds in the tree's regrowing shoots attract a leaf-eating insect.

Cottonwood leaf beetles prefer the leaves that sprout after a beaver has cut a tree down, report researchers from Northern Arizona University Northern Arizona University (NAU) is a public university in Flagstaff, Arizona in the United States.

As of Fall 2007, the university has 21,352 students, 13,989 of these are situated in the main Flagstaff campus<ref name="Enrollment" />.
 in Flagstaff Flagstaff, city (1990 pop. 45,857), seat of Coconino co., N Ariz., near the San Francisco Peaks; inc. 1894. Lumbering, ranching, and a lively tourist trade thrive in the region, where many ruined pueblos, numerous state parks, several lakes, and large pine forests . Beetle larvae Larvae, in Roman religion
Larvae: see lemures.
 that eat the new growth co-opt the nasty compounds to protect themselves.

"The thing that's neat about it is that it's a positive interaction," says Gregory D. Martinsen, a coauthor of the report in the January Ecology. "The beaver herbivory ends up benefiting the beetle."

Compared to the cottonwood's normal juvenile growth, the resprouts contain twice the concentrations of phenolic phe·no·lic
adj.
Of, relating to, containing, or derived from phenol.

n.
Any of various synthetic thermosetting resins, obtained by the reaction of phenols with simple aldehydes and used as adhesives.
 glycosides, aspirinlike compounds that repel other herbivores. Nevertheless, resprouts attracted 15 times as many adult Chrysomela confluens beetles, the scientists report. Beetle larvae were also more numerous on new growth. In an experiment, they grew faster and larger on the resprouts than on juvenile sprouts.

"In theory, the [change in] chemistry should be worse for the beetle," says ecologist Mark D. Hunter of the University of Georgia Organization
The President of the University of Georgia (as of 2007, Michael F. Adams) is the head administrator and is appointed and overseen by the Georgia Board of Regents.
 in Athens, "but the beetle does something very clever with that chemistry."

The larvae store the chemicals in their glands as a defense against predators, explains Martinsen. When disturbed, the larvae turn the glands inside out, exposing drops of foul-smelling, bitter-tasting fluid.

Ants, which eat beetle larvae, are common on cottonwood trees. Martinsen and his colleagues tested the potency of the chemical defense by placing larvae on ant mounds.

"The bravest ant attacks the [larva larva, in zoology
larva, independent, immature animal that undergoes a profound change, or metamorphosis, to assume the typical adult form. Larvae occur in almost all of the animal phyla; because most are tiny or microscopic, they are rarely seen.
], and the glands come out. The ants literally do back flips to get away from it," he says. "This happens several times."

The researchers found that larvae which were fed resprouts could hold out against the ants 28 percent longer than larvae fed normal juvenile leaves.

Such studies of indirect effects, in which an interaction between two species affects a third, are a burgeoning area of research for ecologists.

"Although the idea that everything is connected to everything else has been around for at least a century," says J. Timothy Wootton, an ecologist at the University of Chicago, "good experimental evidence that that is indeed the case has only recently been available."
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1998, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:cottonwood trees cut down by beavers grow sprouts that attract beetle larvae
Author:Jensen, Mari N.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Feb 7, 1998
Words:382
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