Department of Environmental Science and Policy, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Ecol Lett. 2010 Feb;13(2):145-53. doi: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2009.01409.x. Epub 2009 Nov 23.
Biological invasions greatly increase the potential for hybridization among native and non-native species. Hybridization may influence the palatability of novel hybrids to consumers potentially influencing invasion success; however, the palatability of non-native hybrids relative to the parent species is poorly known. In contrast, studies of native-only hybrids find they are nearly always more palatable to consumers than the parent species. Here, I experimentally demonstrate that an invasive hybrid cordgrass (Spartina) is dramatically less palatable to grazing geese than the native parent species. Using field and aviary experiments, I show that grazing geese ignore the hybrid cordgrass and preferentially consume native Spartina. I also experimentally demonstrate that reduced herbivory of the invasive hybrid may contribute to faster spread in a California estuary. These results suggest that biological invasions may increase future opportunities for creating novel hybrids that may pose a greater risk to natural systems than the parent species.
生物入侵大大增加了本地和非本地物种之间杂交的可能性。杂交可能会影响新型杂交种对消费者的可接受性,从而潜在地影响入侵的成功;然而,相对于亲本物种,非本地杂交种的可接受性知之甚少。相比之下,对仅本地杂交种的研究发现,它们几乎总是比亲本物种对消费者更具吸引力。在这里,我通过实验证明,一种入侵的杂交草(米草属)对放牧鹅的适口性明显低于本地亲本物种。通过野外和笼养实验,我表明鹅忽略了杂交草,更倾向于食用本地的米草属。我还通过实验证明,入侵杂交种的草食性减少可能有助于在加利福尼亚河口更快地扩散。这些结果表明,生物入侵可能会增加未来创造新型杂交种的机会,这些杂交种可能比亲本物种对自然系统构成更大的风险。