Although herbivory in ground-rooted flora is well documented, current
knowledge of the herbivore pressure on vascular epiphytes remains mostly
anecdotal. Here, we present the results of a 3-year study on the herbivory
in a population of the epiphytic bromeliad Vriesea sanguinolenta. In
different years, 26–61% of all epiphytes showed traces of herbivore
attack, while up to 4.4% of the entire leaf area of the epiphyte population
was consumed annually. The recorded levels of damage to photosynthetic
tissue, mostly caused by the larvae of Napaea eucharilla (Riodinidae,
Lepidoptera), indicate that vascular epiphytes may be regularly and
sometimes even lethally attacked by insect herbivores. The level of damage
is comparable to ground-rooted tropical flora, which certainly does not
support the prevalent notion of low and negligible levels of herbivory in
vascular epiphytes.