Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

  • Loading metrics

Warming and drought combine to increase pest insect fitness on urban trees

Abstract

Urban habitats are characterized by impervious surfaces, which increase temperatures and reduce water availability to plants. The effects of these conditions on herbivorous insects are not well understood, but may provide insight into future conditions. Three primary hypotheses have been proposed to explain why multiple herbivorous arthropods are more abundant and damaging in cities, and support has been found for each. First, less complex vegetation may reduce biological control of pests. Second, plant stress can increase plant quality for pests. And third, urban warming can directly increase pest fitness and abundance. These hypotheses are not mutually exclusive, and the effects of temperature and plant stress are particularly related. Thus, we test the hypothesis that urban warming and drought stress combine to increase the fitness and abundance of the scale insect, Melanaspis tenebricosa, an urban tree pest that is more abundant in urban than rural areas of the southeastern U.S. We did this by manipulating drought stress across an existing mosaic of urban warming. We found support for the additive effect of temperature and drought stress such that female embryo production and body size increased with temperature and was greater on drought-stressed than watered trees. This study provides further evidence that drivers of pest insect outbreaks act in concert, rather than independently, and calls for more research that manipulates multiple abiotic factors related to urbanization and climate change to predict their effects on ecological interactions. As cities expand and the climate changes, warmer temperatures and drought conditions may become more widespread in the native range of this pest. These changes have direct physiological benefits for M. tenebricosa, and potentially other pests, that may increase their fitness and abundance in urban and natural forests.

Introduction

Urban forests are often more heavily infested with herbivorous arthropod pests than surrounding rural areas [1]. There are multiple potential drivers of this, which are not well understood. One well supported hypothesis suggests that features of urban landscapes support fewer natural enemies, creating enemy-free space that allows herbivores to proliferate [24]. More recently, urban warming has been shown to play a major role and may outweigh factors associated with conservation biological control [57]. Temperature directly affects arthropod metabolism and development, which under warming may lead to larger, more fecund individuals [810]. Dale and Frank (2014b) found that 2°C of urban warming increased the abundance of Melanaspis tenebricosa (Hemiptera: Diaspididae), a scale insect pest, on Acer rubrum street trees. One mechanism for this was that M. tenebricosa on trees in warmer areas were larger and produced up to three times as many offspring as those on trees in cooler areas.

Urban warming, or the urban heat island effect, is driven by impervious surface cover, building density, and other anthropogenic factors [11]. Impervious surface cover around trees reduces water infiltration and availability to plant roots [12, 13]. At the same time, warming can induce drought stress by increasing the atmospheric demand for water [14, 15]. The plant stress hypothesis proposes that drought can increase herbivore fitness and abundance by increasing the nutritional quality of plants and reducing plant defenses [16, 17]. Sap-feeding pests in particular, often show a positive response to drought stress [1820]. Several studies link the plant stress hypothesis to urbanization by showing positive relationships between impervious surface cover and herbivore abundance, or between drought, impervious surface, and herbivores [2124]. For example, Cregg and Dix (2001) found that oak trees growing in downtown sidewalk tree pits were more drought-stressed and harbored more aphids and lace bugs than oaks planted in a nearby campus park with little impervious surface. Likewise, the density of Pulvinaria regalis on urban mulberry trees significantly increased as surrounding impervious surface cover increased [22].

Climate change research suggests that abiotic factors like temperature, CO2, and drought often act in concert or antagonistically to affect herbivores, which makes single-factor empirical tests less meaningful [25]. Given the close association between urban warming, impervious surface cover, and drought stress, it is difficult to separate their effects in observational experiments. Our overriding goal was to determine how drought stress and warming interact to affect the fecundity and population growth of M. tenebricosa, a sap feeding pest of urban trees in the southeastern U.S. Our first objective was to manipulate water stress in A. rubrum street trees across an existing gradient of urban temperatures to decouple these effects on M. tenebricosa. Our second objective was to determine the effect of drought stress and temperature on M. tenebricosa fitness by quantifying body size, embryo production, and abundance over three generations. Understanding the effects of warming and drought on urban plants and animals is important because urban forests support much of urban biodiversity and provide ecosystem services like cooling, air filtration, and aesthetic enhancement that benefit human and environmental health [2628].

Materials and methods

Study organisms

The gloomy scale, M. tenebricosa, is a native armored scale insect pest of Acer spp. trees, primarily A. rubrum, which is the most common genus of landscape tree in the eastern U.S. [2931]. Acer rubrum is native throughout eastern North America and comprises over 18% of the trees in Raleigh’s urban street tree inventory and approximately 15% of trees in natural forests in North Carolina’s piedmont region [32, 33]. Melanaspis tenebricosa are drastically more abundant on A. rubrum in urban than natural forests throughout the southeastern U.S. [29, 30, 34]. These insects feed on parenchyma cells within the trunk and branches of trees [35]. Heavy infestations cause trees to lose branches, prematurely drop leaves, and often die [29].

Melanaspis tenebricosa undergoes one generation per year, although they develop from nymph to adult within approximately five months (May-September) [36]. These insects spend the winter as adult females, then give live birth over 6 to 8 weeks beginning in May [29, 36]. Newly emerged nymphs are mobile for a few hours before settling on the bark, where they become sessile, produce a waxy cover, and feed for the remainder of their life. Nymphs become adults by approximately September, mate during the fall, and begin egg production soon after [36].

Study system

This study was conducted in the city of Raleigh, North Carolina in the piedmont region of the southeastern U.S. Raleigh, NC has a temperate climate with an average annual precipitation and temperature of 117 cm and 15°C, respectively [37]. All trees used in the study were property of the City of Raleigh, NC, USA and located in the right-of-way, which was up to 10 m from the road’s edge. We were granted permission to conduct research on these trees by the Raleigh Parks, Recreation, and Cultural Resources Department. To select study sites, we used ArcMap 10.2 to overlay a geocoded street tree inventory map created by the city of Raleigh from 2010 to 2013 onto a Landsat thermal image of surface temperature acquired on 18 August 2007 and prepared as described in Meineke et al. [7]. Using random selection procedures as in Youngsteadt et al. [38], we created a grid of 2x2 km squares, divided the city into equal quadrants, and randomly selected three grid squares per quadrant (Fig 1). From each selected grid square, we picked a pair of A. rubrum from the hottest site and a pair from the coldest site based on Landsat surface temperature, resulting in 48 trees at 24 randomly selected sites. Warmest and coolest sites were selected within each randomly selected grid square to capture the heterogeneity of temperature in Raleigh’s urban forest and simplify the random selection procedure. Tree pairs at each site were between 15–75 m apart from one another following the selection procedure. Rather than using 24 sites as in Dale [39], we used 11 sites due to the logistical constraints of scale insects having to be measured and dissected within a short time after collecting from sites throughout the city. We selected the 11 sites because they represented trees across the gradient of site temperatures and all trees had some level of insect infestation from which we could sample. Tree diameter at breast height (DBH) ranged from 15.7 to 40.4 cm. Tree pairs at each site differed in DBH from 0.5 to 9.3 cm with an average (±SEM) of 3 (±1.2) cm.

thumbnail
Fig 1. Map of A. rubrum street trees and study sites overlaid onto a thermal map of surface temperature in Raleigh, NC.

Grid is made of 2x2 km squares.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0173844.g001

Effect of temperature and water treatment on drought stress

To determine tree canopy temperature, we placed an iButton thermochron DS1921G (Dallas Semiconductor, Dallas, TX, USA) remote temperature logger 4.5 m above ground within each tree’s canopy. iButtons were mounted on the underside of a lateral branch attached to an iButton wall mount within a 59-ml portion container (Dart Container Corporation, Mason, Michigan, USA) using a cable tie. iButtons recorded temperature every two hours from May 2014 through August 2014, the time period in which M. tenebricosa are most active and developing. Mean two-hour tree canopy temperature, henceforth referred to as tree canopy temperature, was calculated for the period May 2014 through August 2014 and used for all analyses of temperature.

One of our objectives is to determine the effect of drought stress. To create a difference in drought stress between trees at each site, one tree was watered and one tree was not. Eleven trees ranging from 15.7 to 40.4 cm in diameter at breast height received no supplemental water beyond natural precipitation. Ten trees with diameters of 15.7 to 31.8 cm were irrigated with two TreeGator ® slow-release watering bags (Spectrum Products Inc., Youngsville, NC) around their base. One tree was 37.7 cm in diameter and required three watering bags around its base for irrigation. Each bag held approximately 75 liters and was filled twice per week from May through August 2014 and 2015, resulting in 300 liters of water per tree per week and 450 liters per week for one tree.

To determine how temperature and watering treatments affected tree drought stress, we used a pressure chamber (PMS Instrument Company, Albany, OR) to measure midday xylem water potential of each tree once during the second week of June, July, and August 2014. Midday water potential was measured during 1100 to 1500 each day. We removed one 15 to 20 cm terminal twig from sun-exposed locations approximately 5.5 m above ground on the north and south-facing sides of each tree. Weather conditions during each measuring period were mostly sunny and between 29 and 31°C. Three-month mean xylem water potential was calculated for each tree and used for analysis.

Effect of temperature and drought stress on M. tenebricosa fitness and abundance

To determine if M. tenebricosa were affected by temperature and drought stress, we measured adult female body size and embryo production, and calculated the ratio of third-generation adult females (counted September 2015) to first generation adult females (counted April 2014) on each tree. To determine the effect of temperature and drought stress on M. tenebricosa fitness, we measured and dissected adult female M. tenebricosa under a dissecting microscope and counted the number of embryos developing within them immediately prior to birth as in Dale & Frank (2014b). At the end of reproductive development, on 6 May 2015, we collected one, 30.5 cm twig from each cardinal direction and selected an adult female every 15 cm beginning at the terminal end, totaling twelve individuals per tree. Using the same technique as Dale and Frank [5], we measured adult female M. tenebricosa body length from the pygidium to the anterior end of the body. Then, we dissected each M. tenebricosa under a stereomicroscope, slide mounted the contents, and counted the developing embryos under a phase-contrast compound light microscope.

Finally, we determined live adult female M. tenebricosa abundance on each A. rubrum by pruning one 0.3 m live terminal twig, 5 m above ground, from each cardinal direction of the tree canopy as in Dale and Frank [40]. Melanaspis tenebricosa were collected and counted under a dissecting microscope at the beginning of the experiment in April 2014 and again in September 2015. Although our first collection was in 2014, it was of 2013-generation adult females that had overwintered and not yet reproduced. Our final collection in September 2015 was of 2015-generation adult females prior to overwintering, which allowed us to capture three generations of M. tenebricosa on each study tree. As a measure of overall population growth on each tree, we calculated the ratio of September 2015 to April 2014 adult females. Population growth ratio data were log transformed to increase the normality of residuals. During the summer of 2015, two study trees were cut down for utility clearance and landscape renovation. Therefore, M. tenebricosa abundance from September 2015 as well as population growth ratio data include 20 trees instead of 22.

Statistical analyses

We quantified body size, embryo production, initial abundance, final abundance, and population growth ratios. Each of these measured dependent variables were analyzed separately using analysis of covariance (ANCOVA), with watering treatment as a categorical predictor and tree canopy temperature as a covariate. Analyses were conducted using PROC GLM and LSMEANS in SAS 9.4 (SAS Version 9.4, Cary, NC). Each ANCOVA was first run as the full model with each predictor (watering treatment, temperature) and the interaction term (watering treatment x temperature) testing the hypothesis that the regression lines had the same slope, or the effect of watering treatment was not dependent on tree canopy temperature. If the interaction was not significant it was removed and the slopes of each regression line were assumed equal to test the hypothesis that each line’s y-intercept was the same, or that there was no effect of watering treatment on the response.

The residuals of temperature and M. tenebricosa abundance for 2014 and 2015 did not meet the assumptions of normality. Since log transforming count data to meet parametric assumptions can produce models with poor fits compared to raw data fit to a Poisson distribution, we compared the goodness of fit for GLM models using raw and log-transformed data [41]. Model comparisons for the analyses of temperature and water treatment predicting untransformed M. tenebricosa abundance from 2014 and 2015 were conducted using PROC GENMOD in SAS 9.4 (SAS Version 9.4, Cary, NC), specifying a Poisson distribution and log link function. Next, we analyzed log10-transformed M. tenebricosa abundance from each year using PROC GENMOD, specifying a normal distribution and log link function. Based on goodness of fit indices (AIC and Deviance/DF), we used log10-transformed M. tenebricosa abundance for both analyses (S1 Table).

Results

Effect of temperature and water treatment on drought stress

Mean tree canopy temperature from May 2014 through August 2014 ranged from 23.64 to 25.90°C with a mean (±SEM) of 25.15 (±0.13). Water potential of the watered trees ranged from -2.28 to -3.39 MPa with a mean (±SEM) of -2.95 (±0.11) and unwatered trees ranged from -2.80 to -3.96 MPa with a mean (±SEM) of -3.45 (±0.12). There was no interaction between temperature and water treatment. The full model of temperature and watering treatment predicting xylem water potential was significant (Table 1). As temperature increased, A. rubrum xylem water potential (MPa) decreased and was, on average, more negative on unwatered than watered trees (Table 1, Fig 2).

thumbnail
Fig 2. ANCOVA regression plot of tree canopy temperature and watering treatment (W = watered, UW = unwatered) predicting mean xylem water potential (MPa).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0173844.g002

thumbnail
Table 1. ANCOVA of the effect of temperature and water treatment on xylem water potential.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0173844.t001

Xylem vulnerability curves conducted by Johnson et al. [42] suggest that A. rubrum is moderately drought tolerant and can withstand as low as -3.9 MPa of xylem negative pressure before embolism occurs in 50% of vessels, indicative of severe drought stress. We found that the warmest, unwatered A. rubrum street trees surpassed -3.9 MPa during midday water potential measurements (Fig 2), suggesting that damaging levels of drought stress are occurring in Raleigh’s A. rubrum street trees that do not receive irrigation.

Effect of temperature and water treatment on M. tenebricosa fitness and abundance

The effect of temperature on adult female body size did not depend on drought stress. Adult female M. tenebricosa body size was significantly associated with the full model of tree canopy temperature and drought stress (Fig 3A). Body size increased with tree canopy temperature (Table 2), corroborating Dale and Frank [5]. More importantly, M. tenebricosa on unwatered trees were 3% larger than those on watered trees (Table 2).

thumbnail
Fig 3.

ANCOVA regression plots of (a) tree canopy temperature predicting mean M. tenebricosa adult female body size of individuals from each watering treatment (W = watered, UW = unwatered) and (b) tree canopy temperature predicting mean number of embryos per individual M. tenebricosa adult female on each watering treatment.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0173844.g003

thumbnail
Table 2. ANCOVA of the effect of temperature and water treatment on M. tenebricosa.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0173844.t002

The effect of temperature on adult female embryo production was also not dependent on drought stress. Melanaspis tenebricosa embryo count was associated with the full model of temperature and water treatment and adult females produced significantly more offspring as tree canopy temperature increased (Fig 3B, Table 2). More strikingly, M. tenebricosa on unwatered trees produced 17% more embryos per individual than those on watered trees (Table 2). Thus, M. tenebricosa on the warmest unwatered trees have the potential to produce substantially more successful offspring than those on the coolest watered trees.

Melanaspis tenebricosa abundance in April 2014 ranged from 0 to 577 live adult females per 0.3 m of twig with a mean (±SEM) of 160.73 (±41.61). M. tenebricosa abundance in September 2015 ranged from 0 to 1018 live adult females per 0.3 m of twig with a mean (±SEM) of 194.39 (±59.32). At the beginning of the experiment (April 2014), tree canopy temperature and M. tenebricosa abundance were significantly, positively associated, but did not differ between treatments (Table 2). By the conclusion (September 2015), tree canopy temperature remained significantly associated with M. tenebricosa abundance, but there was still no difference in abundance between watering treatments (Table 2, Fig 4A). Population growth ratios were also not significantly predicted by tree canopy temperature and did not differ between watering treatments (Table 2, Fig 4B).

thumbnail
Fig 4.

ANCOVA regression plot of (a) tree canopy temperature predicting final M. tenebricosa abundance (2015) on study trees (W = watered, UW = unwatered) and (b) tree canopy temperature predicting the M. tenebricosa log10 population growth ratio of individuals on watered and unwatered trees.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0173844.g004

Discussion

The rate and severity of global climate change and extent of urbanization are increasing, yet we still have inconsistent predictions about how heat and drought will affect herbivorous insects [4345]. Inconsistencies are partly the result of single-factor and observational studies, which ignore the synergistic and additive relationships that affect ecological processes [46]. In fact, few studies have simultaneously examined the effect of temperature and drought on herbivorous pests, and none have manipulated drought on established urban trees [24, 45, 47]. Here we show that drought exacerbates the effect of warming such that M. tenebricosa produced over 17% more embryos on the warmest unwatered trees than the warmest watered trees, and over 65% more than the coolest watered trees. Understanding how multiple climatic factors like temperature and drought act together to affect insect pests and their host trees is essential for managing forests and ecosystem services under climate change [25, 48].

There is mixed support in the literature about the effects of plant drought stress on herbivorous arthropods, but sap-feeding insect performance generally increases with plant stress [14, 45, 47, 49]. On trees in particular, drought stress increases sugar and nitrogen concentrations, which herbivores are able to exploit [16, 47]. Since herbivorous insects are primarily nitrogen-limited, greater plant nitrogen concentrations can increase fecundity, development rate, and abundance [18, 47, 50]. For example, McClure [51] showed that the fecundity, survival, and abundance of an armored scale insect, Fiorinia externa, increased as percent total nitrogen content of eastern hemlock trees increased. Although we don’t know how nutrient content differed among our study trees, our results suggest that tree drought stress benefits pest fitness, and nutrient content is a plausible mechanism for this.

Characteristics of urban forests, like the range of warming found within a city, are often similar to those projected in natural forests by the end of this century [44]. Research has demonstrated that insects and plants respond to warming in urban and natural forests [38, 52]. However, these forests face multiple factors that may interact or have additive effects on the services they provide [25]. The net effects of multifactor interactions are difficult to capture, but recent work is beginning to do so. For example, Meineke et al [53] found that spider mite and scale insect pests were more abundant on warmer than cooler urban trees, yet warmer temperatures, not pests, reduced carbon sequestration by 12% across an urban forest. Our results suggest that temperature and drought additively affect an important insect pest of the most common genus of urban tree in eastern North America [31]. Evidence from Dale & Frank [40] suggests that increased temperatures, M. tenebricosa abundance, and drought stress reduce the condition and services provided by these urban trees. Thus, our results are important because they can inform urban forest management practices like irrigation and landscape design, or by guiding tree species selections based on urban landscape characteristics, which may mitigate the negative effects of cities [54, 55].

An important note about the effect of drought and temperature on M. tenebricosa and similar insect pests is the extended timeline by which change occurs. On our study trees, M. tenebricosa abundance increased by three orders of magnitude across just over a 2°C increase in tree canopy temperature (Fig 4A). However, this occurred over many years of infestation and exposure to the urban environment. Just one year of watering alleviated drought stress and resulted in smaller insects with lower embryo production compared to individuals on drought stressed trees. Although our population growth and abundance results do not suggest that watering reduced insect abundance, this may be due to our limited ability to detect a change. More specifically, the slow rate at which these insects reproduce, the large initial population size infesting our study trees, and the variation in scale abundance among trees makes detection difficult. Therefore, more long-term evaluation of the effect of reducing drought stress is needed. This also emphasizes the importance of reducing water stress throughout the ontogeny of A. rubrum street trees, particularly early on, so that M. tenebricosa cannot grow to damaging populations before mitigation efforts begin.

Urban warming, drought stress, and M. tenebricosa abundance reduce A. rubrum tree condition and ecosystem services by reducing canopy density, photosynthesis rates, and aesthetic quality [39, 40]. Therefore, chronic pest infestations of M. tenebricosa and other scale insects pose an inconspicuous, yet serious threat to urban forests as cities expand and climatic conditions become warmer and drier [40, 56]. Although understudied, evidence suggests that chronic feeding by herbivores like scale insects or aphids is widespread and increasing due to global warming [57, 58]. Since some abiotic conditions of urban forests, particularly temperature and drought, often resemble those projected in natural forests in multiple regions of the world, our results could inform future changes in pest dynamics in other systems and natural forests [44, 5961]. Similarly, cities may experience impending pest outbreaks associated with climate change before surrounding natural forests [62]. Future studies should take an analogous approach by manipulating multiple urban environmental stress factors and measuring their effect on insects and plants under field conditions. Only then may we obtain a more complete understanding of the effects of future global change on urban and natural ecosystems.

Supporting information

S1 Table. ANCOVA model comparisons of temperature predicting M. tenebricosa abundance.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0173844.s001

(DOCX)

Acknowledgments

We thank Elsa Youngsteadt for her advice and assistance with study design. Eric Archer provided valuable technical support and assistance with fieldwork and data collection. George Kennedy, Barbara Fair, and Melissa McHale provided comments on the manuscript. Sally Thigpen, Zach Manor, and Raleigh Parks, Recreation, and Cultural Resources provided tree maps and approved this study.

Author Contributions

  1. Conceptualization: AGD SDF.
  2. Data curation: AGD.
  3. Formal analysis: AGD.
  4. Funding acquisition: AGD SDF.
  5. Investigation: AGD.
  6. Methodology: AGD SDF.
  7. Project administration: AGD SDF.
  8. Resources: SDF.
  9. Software: AGD.
  10. Supervision: AGD SDF.
  11. Validation: AGD SDF.
  12. Visualization: AGD SDF.
  13. Writing – original draft: AGD SDF.
  14. Writing – review & editing: AGD SDF.

References

  1. 1. Raupp MJ, Shrewsbury PM, Herms DA. Disasters by design: Outbreaks along urban gradients. In: Barbosa P, Letourneau DK, Agrawal AA, editors. Insect Outbreaks Revisited. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd; 2012.
  2. 2. Raupp MJ, Shrewsbury PM, Herms DA. Ecology of herbivorous arthropods in urban landscapes. Annu Rev Entomol. 2010;55:19–38. pmid:19961321
  3. 3. Shrewsbury PM, Raupp MJ. Evaluation of Components of Vegetational Texture for Predicting Azalea Lace Bug, Stephanitis pyrioides (Heteroptera: Tingidae), Abundance in Managed Landscapes. Environmental Entomology. 2000;29(5):919–26.
  4. 4. Tooker JF, Hanks LM. Influence of Plant Community Structure on Natural Enemies of Pine Needle Scale (Homoptera: Diaspididae) in Urban Landscapes. Environmental Entomology. 2000;29(6):1305–11.
  5. 5. Dale AG, Frank SD. Urban warming trumps natural enemy regulation of herbivorous pests. Ecological Applications. 2014;24(7):1596–607.
  6. 6. Meineke EK, Dunn RR, Frank SD. Early pest development and loss of biological control are associated with urban warming. Biol Lett. 2014;10(11):20140586. PubMed Central PMCID: PMC4261856. pmid:25411378
  7. 7. Meineke EK, Dunn RR, Sexton JO, Frank SD. Urban warming drives insect pest abundance on street trees. PLoS One. 2013;8(3):e59687. pmid:23544087
  8. 8. Berger D, Walters R, Gotthard K. What limits insect fecundity? Body size- and temperature-dependent egg maturation and oviposition in a butterfly. Functional Ecology. 2008;22(3):523–9.
  9. 9. Kozlowski J. Optimal allocation of resources to growth and reproduction: Implications for age and size at maturity. Trends in Ecology and Evolution. 1992;7(1):15–9. pmid:21235937
  10. 10. Yasuda S. Effects of thermal conditions on the sex ratio of Pseudaulacaspis pentagona (Targioni) (Hemiptera: Diaspididae), at the early stage of ovogenesis and egg batch size. Journal of Sericultural Science of Japan. 1983;52:106–9.
  11. 11. Kim HH. Urban heat island. International Journal of Remote Sensing. 1992;13(12):2319–36.
  12. 12. Graves W. Urban soil temperatures and their potential impact on tree growth. Journal of Arboriculture. 1994;20(1):24–7.
  13. 13. Oke TR, Crowther JM, McNaughton KG, Monteith JL, Gardiner B. The micrometeorology of the urban forest [and discussion]. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 1989;324(1223):335–49.
  14. 14. Mattson WJ, Haack RA. The role of drought in outbreaks of plant-eating insects. BioScience. 1987;37(2):110–8.
  15. 15. McIntyre NE. Ecology of urban arthropods: A review and a call to action. Annals of the Entomological Society of America. 2000;93(4):825–35.
  16. 16. White TCR. The abundance of invertebrate herbivores in relation to the availability of nitrogen in stressed food plants. Oecologia. 1984;63:90–105.
  17. 17. Herms DA, Mattson WJ. The Dilemma of Plants: To grow or defend. The Quarterly Review of Biology. 1992;67(3):283–335.
  18. 18. Herms DA. Effects of Fertilization on Insect Resistance of Woody Ornamental Plants: Reassessing an Entrenched Paradigm: Fig 1. Environmental Entomology. 2002;31(6):923–33.
  19. 19. Huberty AF, Denno RF. Plant water stress and its consequences for herbivorous insects: A new synthesis. Ecology. 2004;85:1383–98.
  20. 20. Koricheva J, Larsson S. Insect performance on experimentally stressed woody plants: A meta-analysis. Annual Review of Entomology. 1998;1998(43).
  21. 21. Cregg BM, Dix ME. Tree moisture stress and insect damage in urban areas in relation to heat island effects. Journal of Arboriculture. 2001;27(1):8–17.
  22. 22. Speight MR, Hails RS, Gilbert M, Foggo A. Horse Chestnut Scale (Pulvinaria regalis) (Homoptera: Coccidae) and urban host tree environment. Ecology. 1998;79(5):1503–13.
  23. 23. Sperry CE, Chaney WR, Guofan S, Sadof CS. Effects of tree density, tree species diversity, and percentage of hardscape on three insect pests of honeylocust. Journal of Arboriculture. 2001;27(5):263–71.
  24. 24. Raupp MJ, Shrewsbury PM, Herms DA. Ecology of herbivorous arthropods in urban landscapes. Annual Review of Entomology. 2010;55:19–38. pmid:19961321
  25. 25. Robinson EA, Ryan GD, Newman JA. A meta-analytical review of the effects of elevated CO2 on plant-arthropod interactions highlights the importance of interacting environmental and biological variables. The New phytologist. 2012;194(2):321–36. pmid:22380757
  26. 26. Donovan GH, Butry DT, Michael YL, Prestemon JP, Liebhold AM, Gatziolis D, et al. The relationship between trees and human health: evidence from the spread of the emerald ash borer. Am J Prev Med. 2013;44(2):139–45. pmid:23332329
  27. 27. Nowak DJ, Greenfield EJ, Hoehn RE, Lapoint E. Carbon storage and sequestration by trees in urban and community areas of the United States. Environ Pollut. 2013;178:229–36. pmid:23583943
  28. 28. McKinney ML. Urbanization, biodiversity, and conservation. BioScience. 2002;52(10):883–90.
  29. 29. Frank SD, Klingeman WE, White SA, Fulcher A. Biology, Injury, and Management of Maple Tree Pests in Nurseries and Urban Landscapes. Journal of Integrated Pest Management. 2013;4(1):1–14.
  30. 30. Metcalf ZP. The gloomy scale, an important enemy of shade trees in North Carolina. Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society. 1912;28:88–91.
  31. 31. Raupp MJ, Cumming AB, Raupp EC. Street tree diversity in eastern North America and its potential for tree loss to exotic borers. Arboriculture & Urban Forestry. 2006;32(6):297–304.
  32. 32. Acer rubrum [Internet]. Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fires Sciences Laboratory. 1991. Available from: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/.
  33. 33. Christensen NL. Changes in structure, pattern and diversity associated with climax forest maturation in piedmont, North Carolina. The American Midland Naturalist. 1977;97(1):176–88.
  34. 34. Youngsteadt E, Dale AG, Terando AJ, Dunn RR, Frank SD. Do cities simulate climate change? A comparison of herbivore response to urban and global warming. Glob Chang Biol. 2014;21(1):97–105. pmid:25163424
  35. 35. Beardsley JW, Gonzalez RH. The biology and ecology of armored scales. Annual Review of Entomology. 1975;20:47–73. pmid:1090245
  36. 36. Metcalf ZP. The gloomy scale. NC Agriculture Experiment Station Technical Bulletin. 1922;21:1–23.
  37. 37. Climate Office NC. North Carolina 1971–2000 Climate Normals: State Climate Office of North Carolina; 2016 [cited 2017]. Available from: http://climate.ncsu.edu/cronos/normals.php?station=317079.
  38. 38. Youngsteadt E, Dale AG, Terando AJ, Dunn RR, Frank SD. Do cities simulate climate change? A comparison of herbivore response to urban and global warming. Global Change BIology. 2014;21(1):97–105. pmid:25163424
  39. 39. Dale AG. Chapter 5: The effects of urban warming, drought, and an herbivorous pest on street tree physiology and growth: North Carolina State University; 2015.
  40. 40. Dale AG, Frank SD. The effects of urban warming of herbivore abundance and street tree condition. PlosOne. 2014;9(7).
  41. 41. O’Hara RB, Kotze DJ. Do not log-transform count data. Methods in Ecology and Evolution. 2010;1(2):118–22.
  42. 42. Johnson DM, McCulloh KA, Meinzer FC, Woodruff DR, Eissenstat DM. Hydraulic patterns and safety margins, from stem to stomata, in three eastern U.S. tree species. Tree physiology. 2011;31(6):659–68. pmid:21724585
  43. 43. Bale JS, Masters GJ, Hodkinson ID, Awmack C, Bezemer TM, Brown VK, et al. Herbivory in global climate change research: Direct effects of rising temperature on insect herbivores. Global Change Biology. 2002;8:1–16.
  44. 44. IPCC. Climate change 2014: Synthesis report. Contribution of working groups I, II, and III to the fifth assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Geneva, Switzeraland: IPCC, 2014.
  45. 45. Jamieson MA, Trowbridge AM, Raffa KF, Lindroth RL. Consequences of climate warming and altered precipitation patterns for plant-insect and multitrophic interactions. Plant physiology. 2012;160(4):1719–27. PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3510105. pmid:23043082
  46. 46. Scherber C, Gladbach DJ, Stevnbak K, Karsten RJ, Schmidt IK, Michelsen A, et al. Multi-factor climate change effects on insect herbivore performance. Ecology and evolution. 2013;3(6):1449–60. PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3686182. pmid:23789058
  47. 47. Koricheva J, Larsson S, Haukioja E. Insect performance on experimentally stressed woody plants: A meta-analysis. Annual Review of Entomology. 1998;43:195–216. pmid:15012389
  48. 48. Leuzinger S, Luo Y, Beier C, Dieleman W, Vicca S, Korner C. Do global change experiments overestimate impacts on terrestrial ecosystems? Trends in ecology & evolution. 2011;26(5):236–41.
  49. 49. Zvereva EL, Kozlov MV. Consequences of simultaneous elevation of carbon dioxide and temperature for plant-herbivore interactions: a metaanalysis. Global Change Biology. 2006;12(1):27–41.
  50. 50. Mattson WJ. Herbivory in relation to plant nitrogen content. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics. 1980;11:119–61.
  51. 51. McClure MS. Foliar nitrogen: A basis for host suitability for elongate hemlock scale, Fiorinia externa (Homoptera: Diaspididae). Ecology. 1980;61(1):72–9.
  52. 52. Jochner S, Caffarra A, Menzel A. Can spatial data substitute temporal data in phenological modelling? A survey using birch flowering. Tree physiology. 2013;33(12):1256–68. pmid:24169102
  53. 53. Meineke E, Youngsteadt E, Dunn RR, Frank SD. Urban warming reduces aboveground carbon storage. Proc Biol Sci. 2016;283(1840). PubMed Central PMCID: PMCPMC5069513.
  54. 54. Dale AG, Youngsteadt E, Frank SD. Forecasting the effects of heat and pests on urban trees: Impervious surface thresholds and the 'Pace-to-Plant' technique. Arboriculture & Urban Forestry. 2016;42(3):181–91.
  55. 55. Mullaney J, Lucke T, Trueman SJ. A review of benefits and challenges in growing street trees in paved urban environments. Landscape and Urban Planning. 2015;134:157–66.
  56. 56. Schaffer B, Mason LJ. Effects of scale insect herbivory and shading on net gas exchange and growth of a subtropical tree species (Gualacum sanctum L.). Oecologia. 1990;84(4):468–73.
  57. 57. Cannon RJC. The implications of predicted climate change for insect pests in the UK, with emphasis on non-indigenous species. Global Change Biology. 1998;4:785–96.
  58. 58. Kozlov MV, Stekolshchikov AV, Soderman G, Labina ES, Zverev V, Zvereva EL. Sap-feeding insects on forest trees along latitudinal gradients in northern Europe: a climate-driven patterns. Glob Chang Biol. 2015;21(1):106–16. pmid:25044643
  59. 59. George K, Ziska LH, Bunce JA, Quebedeaux B. Elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration and temperature across an urban–rural transect. Atmospheric Environment. 2007;41(35):7654–65.
  60. 60. Grimm NB, Faeth SH, Golubiewski NE, Redman CL, Wu J, Bai X, et al. Global change and the ecology of cities. Science. 2008;319:756–60. pmid:18258902
  61. 61. Hahs AK, Evans KL. Expanding fundamental ecological knowledge by studying urban ecosystems. Functional Ecology. 2015;29(7):863–7.
  62. 62. Robinet C, Imbert C-E, Rousselet J, Sauvard D, Garcia J, Goussard F, et al. Human-mediated long-distance jumps of the pine processionary moth in Europe. Biological Invasions. 2011;14(8):1557–69.