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Richard Lindroth

Richard Lindroth

· Vilas Distinguished Achievement and Sorenson Professor EmeritusVerified

University of Wisconsin-Madison · Entomology

Active 1983–2024

h-index72
Citations18.9k
Papers28430 last 5y
Funding$1.9M
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Research topics

  • Ecology
  • Biology
  • Geography
  • Computer Science
  • Demography
  • Agroforestry
  • Evolutionary biology
  • Economics
  • Environmental science
  • Environmental resource management
  • Natural resource economics

Selected publications

  • Plant size, latitude, and phylogeny explain within-population variability in herbivory

    Science · 2023 · 60 citations

    • Biology
    • Ecology
    • Geography

    Interactions between plants and herbivores are central in most ecosystems, but their strength is highly variable. The amount of variability within a system is thought to influence most aspects of plant-herbivore biology, from ecological stability to plant defense evolution. Our understanding of what influences variability, however, is limited by sparse data. We collected standardized surveys of herbivory for 503 plant species at 790 sites across 116° of latitude. With these data, we show that within-population variability in herbivory increases with latitude, decreases with plant size, and is phylogenetically structured. Differences in the magnitude of variability are thus central to how plant-herbivore biology varies across macroscale gradients. We argue that increased focus on interaction variability will advance understanding of patterns of life on Earth.

  • Coordinated resource allocation to plant growth–defense tradeoffs

    New Phytologist · 2021 · 237 citations

    • Computer Science
    • Natural resource economics
    • Environmental resource management

    Plant resource allocation patterns often reveal tradeoffs that favor growth (G) over defense (D), or vice versa. Ecologists most often explain G-D tradeoffs through principles of economic optimality, in which negative trait correlations are attributed to the reconciliation of fitness costs. Recently, researchers in molecular biology have developed 'big data' resources including multi-omic (e.g. transcriptomic, proteomic and metabolomic) studies that describe the cellular processes controlling gene expression in model species. In this synthesis, we bridge ecological theory with discoveries in multi-omics biology to better understand how selection has shaped the mechanisms of G-D tradeoffs. Multi-omic studies reveal strategically coordinated patterns in resource allocation that are enabled by phytohormone crosstalk and transcriptional signal cascades. Coordinated resource allocation justifies the framework of optimality theory, while providing mechanistic insight into the feedbacks and control hubs that calibrate G-D tradeoff commitments. We use the existing literature to describe the coordinated resource allocation hypothesis (CoRAH) that accounts for balanced cellular controls during the expression of G-D tradeoffs, while sustaining stored resource pools to buffer the impacts of future stresses. The integrative mechanisms of the CoRAH unify the supply- and demand-side perspectives of previous G-D tradeoff theories.

  • Growth–defense trade-offs shape population genetic composition in an iconic forest tree species

    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences · 2021 · 45 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Biology
    • Ecology
    • Geography

    33, 7-12 (2019)]. Eco-evolutionary drivers of tree growth and defense are thus critical to stand-level trait variation, which structures communities and ecosystems over expansive spatiotemporal scales.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Thomas G. Whitham

    Northern Arizona University

    30 shared
  • Kennedy F. Rubert‐Nason

    University of Wisconsin–Madison

    23 shared
  • Liza M. Holeski

    Northern Arizona University

    20 shared
  • Eric L. Kruger

    University of Wisconsin–Madison

    19 shared
  • Stuart C. Wooley

    University of Wisconsin–Madison

    18 shared
  • John J. Couture

    Purdue University West Lafayette

    17 shared
  • Brian J. Rehill

    United States Naval Academy

    17 shared
  • Kenneth F. Raffa

    University of Wisconsin–Madison

    16 shared

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