Eschtruth Anne K, Battles John J
Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley, 137 Mulford Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720-3114, USA.
Conserv Biol. 2009 Apr;23(2):388-99. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2008.01122.x. Epub 2008 Dec 12.
The successful invasion of exotic plants is often attributed to the absence of coevolved enemies in the introduced range (i.e., the enemy release hypothesis). Nevertheless, several components of this hypothesis, including the role of generalist herbivores, remain relatively unexplored. We used repeated censuses of exclosures and paired controls to investigate the role of a generalist herbivore, white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), in the invasion of 3 exotic plant species (Microstegium vimineum, Alliaria petiolata, and Berberis thunbergii) in eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) forests in New Jersey and Pennsylvania (U.S.A.). This work was conducted in 10 eastern hemlock (T. canadensis) forests that spanned gradients in deer density and in the severity of canopy disturbance caused by an introduced insect pest, the hemlock woolly adelgid (Adelges tsugae). We used maximum likelihood estimation and information theoretics to quantify the strength of evidence for alternative models of the influence of deer density and its interaction with the severity of canopy disturbance on exotic plant abundance. Our results were consistent with the enemy release hypothesis in that exotic plants gained a competitive advantage in the presence of generalist herbivores in the introduced range. The abundance of all 3 exotic plants increased significantly more in the control plots than in the paired exclosures. For all species, the inclusion of canopy disturbance parameters resulted in models with substantially greater support than the deer density only models. Our results suggest that white-tailed deer herbivory can accelerate the invasion of exotic plants and that canopy disturbance can interact with herbivory to magnify the impact. In addition, our results provide compelling evidence of nonlinear relationships between deer density and the impact of herbivory on exotic species abundance. These findings highlight the important role of herbivore density in determining impacts on plant abundance and provide evidence of the operation of multiple mechanisms in exotic plant invasion.
外来植物的成功入侵通常归因于在引入区域缺乏共同进化的天敌(即天敌释放假说)。然而,该假说的几个组成部分,包括广食性食草动物的作用,仍相对未被充分研究。我们通过对围栏和配对对照进行反复调查,来研究广食性食草动物白尾鹿(弗吉尼亚鹿)在美国新泽西州和宾夕法尼亚州铁杉(加拿大铁杉)林中对三种外来植物物种(求米草、欧亚大蒜芥和日本小檗)入侵的作用。这项工作在10片铁杉林中进行,这些林子涵盖了鹿密度梯度以及由引入的害虫铁杉球蚜造成的树冠干扰严重程度梯度。我们使用最大似然估计和信息理论来量化关于鹿密度及其与树冠干扰严重程度相互作用对外来植物丰度影响的替代模型的证据强度。我们的结果与天敌释放假说一致,即外来植物在引入区域有广食性食草动物存在的情况下获得了竞争优势。所有三种外来植物在对照样地中的丰度增加显著多于在配对围栏样地中的增加。对于所有物种,纳入树冠干扰参数后的模型比仅考虑鹿密度的模型得到的支持度要高得多。我们的结果表明,白尾鹿的啃食可以加速外来植物的入侵,并且树冠干扰可以与啃食相互作用以放大这种影响。此外,我们的结果提供了令人信服的证据,证明鹿密度与啃食对外来物种丰度的影响之间存在非线性关系。这些发现突出了食草动物密度在确定对植物丰度影响方面的重要作用,并为外来植物入侵中多种机制的运作提供了证据。