Department of Biological Sciences, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 70803, USA.
Department of Natural Resources Sciences, University of Rhode Island, 1 Greenhouse Road, Kingston, Rhode Island, 02881, USA.
Ecology. 2017 Feb;98(2):349-358. doi: 10.1002/ecy.1646. Epub 2017 Jan 13.
Apparent competition, the negative interaction between species mediated by shared natural enemies, is thought to play an important role in shaping the structure and dynamics of natural communities. However, its importance in driving species invasions, and whether the strength of this indirect interaction varies across the latitudinal range of the invasion, has not been fully explored. We performed replicated field experiments at four sites spanning 900 km along the Atlantic Coast of the United States to assess the presence and strength of apparent competition between sympatric native and invasive lineages of Phragmites australis. Four herbivore guilds were considered: stem-feeders, leaf-miners, leaf-chewers and aphids. We also tested the hypothesis that the strength of this interaction declines with increasing latitude. Within each site, native and invasive plants of P. australis were cross-transplanted between co-occurring native and invasive patches in the same marsh habitat and herbivore damage was evaluated at the end of the growing season. Apparent competition was evident for both lineages and involved all but the leaf-chewer guild. For native plants, total aphids per plant was 296% higher and the incidence of stem-feeding and leaf-mining herbivores was 34% and 221% higher, respectively, when transplanted into invasive than native patches. These data suggest that invasive P. australis has a negative effect on native P. australis via apparent competition. Averaged among herbivore types, the indirect effects of the invasive lineage on the native lineage was 57% higher than the reverse situation, suggesting that apparent competition was asymmetric. We also found that the strength of apparent competition acting against the native lineage was comparable to the benefits to the invasive lineage from enemy release (i.e., proportionately lower mean herbivory of the invasive relative to the native taxa). Finally, we found the first evidence that the strength of apparent competition acting against the native lineage (from stem-feeders only) decreased with increasing latitude. These results suggest that not only could apparent competition be of tantamount importance to enemy release in enhancing the establishment and spread of invasive taxa, but also that these indirect and direct herbivore effects could vary over the invasion range.
显然竞争,即物种间通过共同天敌进行的负相互作用,被认为在塑造自然群落的结构和动态方面发挥着重要作用。然而,它在驱动物种入侵中的重要性,以及这种间接相互作用的强度是否在入侵的纬度范围内发生变化,尚未得到充分探索。我们在美国大西洋沿岸的四个地点进行了重复的野外实验,这些地点横跨 900 公里,以评估共生的本地和入侵的芦苇属植物之间是否存在明显的竞争,并评估这种竞争的强度。考虑了四个食草动物类群:茎食者、叶食者、叶食者和蚜虫。我们还测试了一个假设,即这种相互作用的强度随着纬度的增加而降低。在每个地点,本地和入侵的芦苇属植物在同一沼泽生境中的共生本地和入侵斑块之间进行交叉移植,并在生长季节结束时评估食草动物的损害。对于这两个谱系,都存在明显的竞争,并且除了叶食者类群之外,还涉及到其他类群。对于本地植物来说,当移植到入侵斑块中时,每株植物的总蚜虫数量增加了 296%,茎食者和叶食者的发生率分别增加了 34%和 221%。这些数据表明,入侵的芦苇属植物通过明显的竞争对本地芦苇属植物产生负面影响。平均而言,与食草动物类型相比,入侵谱系对本地谱系的间接影响高出 57%,这表明明显的竞争是不对称的。我们还发现,作用于本地谱系的明显竞争的强度与外来谱系从天敌释放中获得的益处相当(即,入侵相对本地分类群的平均草食性较低)。最后,我们首次发现作用于本地谱系的明显竞争的强度(仅来自茎食者)随纬度的增加而降低。这些结果表明,明显的竞争不仅可以与天敌释放同等重要,从而增强入侵分类群的建立和传播,而且这些间接和直接的食草动物效应可能会在入侵范围内发生变化。