Plants utilize many mechanisms to recover fitness from damage. Such traits include increased photosynthetic activity, compensatory growth,
phenological changes, utilizing stored reserves, reallocating resources, increase in nutrients uptake, and plant architecture (Rosenthal and Kotanen 1994; Strauss and Agrawal 1999; Tiffin 2000).
Photosynthetic rates An increase in photosynthetic rate in undamaged tissues is commonly cited as a mechanism for plants to achieve tolerance (Trumble et al. 1993; Strauss and Agrawal 1999). This is possible since
leaves often function at below their maximum capacity (Trumble et al. 1993). Several different pathways may lead to increases in photosynthesis, including higher levels of the
Rubisco enzyme and delays in leaf senescence (Stowe et al. 2000). However, detecting an increase in environment does not mean plants are tolerant to damage. The resources gained from these mechanisms can be used to increase resistance instead of tolerance, such as for the production secondary compounds in the plant (Tiffin 2000). Also, whether the increase in photosynthetic rate is able to compensate for the damage is still not well studied (Trumble et al. 1993; Stowe et al. 2000).
Compensatory growth Biomass regrowth following herbivory is often reported as an indicator of tolerance and plant response after apical
meristem damage (AMD) is one of the most heavily studied mechanisms of tolerance (Tiffin 2000; Suwa and Maherali 2008; Wise and Abrahamson 2008). Meristems are sites of rapid
cell divisions and so have higher nutrition than most other tissues on the plants . Damage to apical meristems of plants may release it from
apical dominance, activating the growth of axillary meristems which increases branching (Trumble et al. 1993; Wise and Abrahamson 2008). Studies have found branching after AMD to undercompensate, fully compensate and overcompensate for the damage received (Marquis 1996, Haukioja and Koricheva 2000, Wise and Abrahamson 2008). The variation in the extent of growth following herbivory may depend on the number and distribution of meristems, the pattern in which they are activated and the number of new meristems (Stowe et al. 2000). The wide occurrence of overcompensation after AMD has also brought up a controversial idea that there may be a meristem relationship between plants and their herbivores (Belsky 1986; Agrawal 2000; Edwards 2009). As will be further discussed below, herbivores may actually be mutualists of plants, such as
Ipomopsis aggregata, which overcompensate for herbivory (Edwards 2009). Although there are many examples showing biomass regrowth following herbivory, it has been criticized as a useful predictor of fitness since the resources used for regrowth may translate to fewer resources allocated to
reproduction (Suwa and Maherali 2008).
Phenological change Studies have shown herbivory can cause delays in plant growth, flowering and
fruit production (Tiffin 2000). How plants respond to these
phenological delays is likely a tolerance mechanism that will depend highly on their
life history and other
ecological factors such as, the abundance of
pollinators at different times during the
season (Tiffin 2000). If the
growing season is short, plants that are able to shorten the delay of
seed production caused by herbivory are more tolerant than those that cannot shorten this
phenological change (Tiffin 2000). These faster recovering plant will be
selectively favored over those that cannot as they will pass on more of their offspring to the next generation. In longer
growing seasons, however, there may be enough time for most plants to produce
seeds before the season ends regardless of damage. In this case, plants that can shorten the
phenological delay are not any more tolerant than those that cannot as all plants can
reproduce before the season ends (Tiffin 2000).
Stored reserves and resource reallocation Resource allocation following herbivory is commonly studied in
agricultural systems (Trumble et al. 1993). Resources are most often allocated to reproductive structures after damage, as shown by Irwin et al. (2008) in which
Polemonium viscosum and
Ipomopsis aggregata increased flower production after flower larceny. When these reproductive structures are not present, resources are allocated to other tissues, such as
leaves and shoots as seen in juvenile
Plantago lanceolata (Trumble et al. 1993; Barton 2008). Utilizing stored reserves may be an important tolerance mechanism for plants which have abundant time to collect and store resources, such as
perennial plants (Tiffin 2000; Erb
et al. 2009). Resources are often stored in
leaves and specialized storage organs such as
tubers and
roots, and studies have shown evidence that these resources are allocated for regrowth following herbivory (Trumble et al. 1993; Tiffin 2000; Erb
et al. 2009). However, the importance of this mechanism to tolerance is not well studied and it is unknown how much it contributes to tolerance since stored reserves mostly consist of carbon resources, whereas tissue damage causes a loss of
carbon,
nitrogen and other nutrients (Tiffin 2000).
Plant architecture This form of tolerance relies on constitutive mechanisms, such as
morphology, at the time of damage, unlike the induced mechanisms mentioned above. plant architecture includes
roots to
shoots ratios,
stem number,
stem rigidity and plant
vasculature (Marquis 1996, Tiffin 2000). A high
roots to shoots ratio will allow plants to better absorb nutrients following herbivory and rigid
stems will prevent collapse after sustaining damage, increasing plant tolerance (Tiffin 2000). Since plants have a meristemic construction, how resources are restricted among different regions of the plants, referred to as sectoriality, will affect the ability to transfer resources from undamaged areas to damaged areas (Marquis 1996). Although plant
vasculature may play important roles in tolerance, it is not well studied due to the difficulties in identifying the flow of resources (Marquis 1996). Increasing a plant's
vasculature would seem advantageous since it increases the flow of resources to all sites of damage but it may also increase its susceptibility to herbivores, such as
phloem suckers (Marquis 1996, Stowe et al. 2000). ==Measuring tolerance==