Condensed tannins deter feeding by browsing ruminants in a South African savanna
- 1 August 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 67 (1), 142-146
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00378466
Abstract
The palatability of 14 species of woody plant was assessed for three species of browsing ruminant, namely kudus, impalas and goats. Results show that palatability was most clearly related to leaf contents of condensed tannins. The effect was a threshold one, with all plants containing more than 5% condensed tannins being rejected as food during the wet season period. In contrast palatability was not influenced by concentrations of protein-precipitating polyphenols, and only weakly related to contents of nitrogen, phosphorus, cations, fibre components and other secondary metabolites. Insect herbivory shows a different pattern. These findings support the hypotheses that (i) condensed tannins function to protect plant cell walls against microbial attack; (ii) hydrolyzable tannins function to inactivate the digestive enzymes of insect herbivores. Large mammalian herbivores are influenced by condensed tannins due to their dependance upon microbial fermentation of plant cell walls for part of their energy needs.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rapid Changes in Tree Leaf Chemistry Induced by Damage: Evidence for Communication Between PlantsScience, 1983
- Tannins: Does Structure Determine Function? An Ecological PerspectiveThe American Naturalist, 1983
- Annual production fraction of aboveground biomass in relation to plant shrubbiness in savannaBothalia, 1982
- Exaptation—a Missing Term in the Science of FormPaleobiology, 1982
- Birch leaves as a resource for herbivores: Seasonal occurrence of increased resistance in foliage after mechanical damage of adjacent leavesOecologia, 1978
- Secondary Compounds as Protective AgentsAnnual Review of Plant Physiology, 1977
- Patterns in the production of antiherbivore chemical defenses in plant communitiesBiochemical Systematics and Ecology, 1977
- Astringent tannins of Acer speciesPhytochemistry, 1977
- Enzyme inhibition by polyphenols of sorghum grain and maltJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1975
- Haemanalysis of tannins: The concept of relative astringencyPhytochemistry, 1973