Heberling J Mason, Brouwer Nathan L, Kalisz Susan
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Tennessee, 569 Dabney Hall, Knoxville, TN 37996, USA.
Section of Botany, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, 4400 Forbes Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
AoB Plants. 2017 Mar 20;9(2):plx011. doi: 10.1093/aobpla/plx011. eCollection 2017 Mar.
Overabundant generalist herbivores can facilitate non-native plant invasions, presumably through direct and indirect modifications to the environment that affect plant performance. However, ecophysiological mechanisms behind ungulate-mediated plant invasions have not been well-studied. At a long-term (white-tailed deer) exclusion site in a temperate deciduous forest, we quantified deer-mediated ecophysiological impacts on an invasive biennial (garlic mustard) and two palatable native herbaceous perennials, and . In mid-summer, we found that leaf-level light availability was higher in unfenced areas compared with areas fenced to exclude deer. in unfenced areas exhibited 50 % higher mean maximum photosynthetic rates compared with fenced areas. Further, specific leaf area decreased by 48 % on average in unfenced areas, suggesting leaf structural responses to higher light levels. Similarly, had 42 % higher mean photosynthetic rates and 33 % decreased mean specific leaf area in unfenced areas, but these functional advantages were likely countered by high rates of deer herbivory. By contrast, exhibited significantly lower (26 %) maximum photosynthetic rates in unfenced areas, but SLA did not differ. Deer-mediated differences in light saturated photosynthetic rates for all three species were only significant during months with overstory tree canopy cover, when light availability in the herb layer was significantly lower in fenced areas. 's enhanced photosynthetic rates implicate overabundant deer, a situation that is nearly ubiquitous across its invaded range. Collectively, our results provide empirical evidence that generalist herbivores can alter non-native plant physiology to facilitate invasion.
数量过多的泛食性食草动物可能会促进外来植物的入侵,据推测这是通过对环境的直接和间接改变来影响植物的生长表现。然而,有蹄类动物介导的植物入侵背后的生态生理机制尚未得到充分研究。在一个温带落叶林的长期(白尾鹿)排除实验点,我们量化了鹿介导的对一种入侵二年生植物(蒜芥)和两种可口的本地多年生草本植物的生态生理影响。在仲夏时节,我们发现与用围栏排除鹿的区域相比,未围栏区域的叶片水平光照可用性更高。未围栏区域的平均最大光合速率比围栏区域高50%。此外,未围栏区域的比叶面积平均下降了48%,这表明叶片对较高光照水平有结构响应。同样,在未围栏区域,[物种名称2]的平均光合速率高42%,平均比叶面积下降33%,但这些功能优势可能被鹿的高食草率抵消。相比之下,在未围栏区域,[物种名称3]的最大光合速率显著较低(26%),但比叶面积没有差异。在所有三个物种中,鹿介导的光饱和光合速率差异仅在有上层树冠覆盖的月份显著,此时围栏区域草本层的光照可用性显著较低。[物种名称1]光合速率的提高表明鹿数量过多,这种情况在其入侵范围内几乎无处不在。总体而言,我们的结果提供了实证证据,表明泛食性食草动物可以改变外来植物的生理状况以促进其入侵。