Mendes, Gisele MedeirosSilveira, Fernando Augusto de Oliveira eOliveira, Carolina Santos deCruz, Wesley Francisco Dáttilo daGuevara, RogerRuiz Guerra, BetsabéCastro, Maria Gabriela Boaventura deNaidoo, SershenRamdhani, SydPhartyal, Shyam S.Ribeiro, Sérvio PontesPinto, Victor DinizVasconcelos, Heraldo Luis deLeon, Richard TitoPereira, Cássio CardosoBarbosa, Bárbara de CarvalhoCarvalho, Gabriel Martins deVal, Ek delBuisson, EliseArruda, André JardimToth, Jean BaptisteRoque, Fabio de OliveiraSouza, Allan Henrique de AlmeidaBolzan, FabioNeves, Frederico de SiqueiraBelisário, Juliana KuchenbeckerFerreira, Guilherme Ramos DemetrioSantos, Luziene Seixas dosRomero, Gustavo QuevedoOmena, Paula Munhoz deSilva, Jhonathan de OliveiraPaolucci, Lucas NavarroQueiroz, ElenirOoi, Mark K. J.Mills, Charlotte H.Gerhold, PilleMerzin, AnneMassante, Jhonny CapichoniAguilar, RamiroCarbone, Lucas M.Campos, Ricardo Ildefonso deGomes, Inácio José de Melo Teles eNeves, Gabriela ZorzalSolar, Ricardo Ribeiro de CastroRamos, LetíciaSobrinho, Tathiana GuerraPereira, Pedro SandersCornelissen, Tatiana Garabini2021-09-272021-09-272021MENDES, G. M. et al. How much leaf area do insects eat?: a data set of insect herbivory sampled globally with a standardized protocol. Ecology, v. 102, n. 4, artigo e03301, fev. 2021. Disponível em: <https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ecy.3301>. Acesso em: 12 maio 2021.1939-9170http://www.repositorio.ufop.br/jspui/handle/123456789/13809Herbivory is ubiquitous. Despite being a potential driver of plant distribution and performance, herbivory remains largely undocumented. Some early attempts have been made to review, globally, how much leaf area is removed through insect feeding. Kozlov et al., in one of the most comprehensive reviews regarding global patterns of herbivory, have compiled published studies regarding foliar removal and sampled data on global herbivory levels using a standardized protocol. However, in the review by Kozlov et al., only 15 sampling sites, comprising 33 plant species, were evaluated in tropical areas around the globe. In Brazil, which ranks first in terms of plant biodiversity, with a total of 46,097 species, almost half (43%) being endemic, a single data point was sampled, covering only two plant species. In an attempt to increase knowledge regarding herbivory in tropical plant species and to provide the raw data needed to test general hypotheses related to plant–herbivore interactions across large spatial scales, we proposed a joint, collaborative network to evaluate tropical herbivory. This network allowed us to update and expand the data on insect herbivory in tropical and temperate plant species. Our data set, collected with a standardized protocol, covers 45 sampling sites from nine countries and includes leaf herbivory measurements of 57,239 leaves from 209 species of vascular plants belonging to 65 families from tropical and temperate regions. They expand previous data sets by including a total of 32 sampling sites from tropical areas around the globe, comprising 152 species, 146 of them being sampled in Brazil. For temperate areas, it includes 13 sampling sites, comprising 59 species. Thus, when compared to the most recent comprehensive review of insect herbivory (Kozlov et al.), our data set has increased the base of available data for the tropical plants more than 460% (from 33 to 152 species) and the Brazilian sampling was increased 7,300% (from 2 to 146 species). Data on precise levels of herbivory are presented for more than 57,000 leaves worldwide. There are no copyright restrictions. Please cite this paper when using the current data in publications; the authors request to be informed how the data is used in the publications.en-USrestritoDefoliationLatitudinal gradientsLeaf consumptionPlant–herbivore interactionsHow much leaf area do insects eat? : a data set of insect herbivory sampled globally with a standardized protocol.Artigo publicado em periodicohttps://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ecy.3301https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3301