Brandenburger Claire R, Kim Martin, Slavich Eve, Meredith Floret L, Salminen Juha-Pekka, Sherwin William B, Moles Angela T
Evolution and Ecology Research Centre School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences University of New South Wales Sydney NSW Australia.
Stats Central Mark Wainwright Analytical Centre University of New South Wales Sydney NSW Australia.
Ecol Evol. 2020 May 5;10(12):5451-5463. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6288. eCollection 2020 Jun.
The enemy release hypothesis is often cited as a potential explanation for the success of introduced plants; yet, empirical evidence for enemy release is mixed. We aimed to quantify changes in herbivory and defense in introduced plants while controlling for three factors that might have confounded past studies: using a wide native range for comparison with the introduced range, measuring defense traits without determining whether they affect herbivore preferences, and not considering the effect of time since introduction. The first hypothesis we tested was that introduced plants will have evolved lower levels of plant defense compared to their source population. We grew South African (source) and Australian (introduced) beach daisies ( in a common-environment glasshouse experiment and measured seven defense traits. Introduced plants had more ash, alkaloids, and leaf hairs than source plants, but were also less tough, with a lower C:N ratio and less phenolics. Overall, we found no difference in defense between source and introduced plants. To determine whether the feeding habits of herbivores align with changes in defense traits, we conducted preference feeding trials using five different herbivore species. Herbivores showed no overall preference for leaves from either group. The second hypothesis we tested was that herbivory on introduced plant species will increase through time after introduction to a new range. We recorded leaf damage on herbarium specimens of seven species introduced to eastern Australia and three native control species. We found no change in the overall level of herbivory experienced by introduced plants since arriving in Australia.
In the field of invasion ecology, we need to rethink the paradigm that species introduced to a new range undergo simple decreases in defenses against herbivores. Instead, plants are likely to employ a range of defense traits that evolve in both coordinated and opposing ways in response to a plethora of different biotic and abiotic selective pressures.
“天敌释放假说”常被引用来解释外来植物成功入侵的原因;然而,关于天敌释放的实证证据并不一致。我们旨在量化外来植物在食草动物侵害和防御方面的变化,同时控制可能混淆以往研究的三个因素:使用广泛的原生范围与引入范围进行比较、在不确定防御性状是否影响食草动物偏好的情况下测量防御性状,以及不考虑引入后时间的影响。我们测试的第一个假说是,与它们的源种群相比,外来植物的防御水平会有所降低。我们在一个共同环境的温室实验中种植了南非(源地)和澳大利亚(引入地)的海滩雏菊,并测量了七种防御性状。引入的植物比源地植物含有更多的灰分、生物碱和叶毛,但韧性也较低,碳氮比更低,酚类物质更少。总体而言,我们发现源地植物和引入植物在防御方面没有差异。为了确定食草动物的取食习性是否与防御性状的变化一致,我们使用五种不同的食草动物物种进行了偏好取食试验。食草动物对两组植物的叶子没有总体偏好。我们测试的第二个假说是,外来植物物种在引入新范围后的一段时间内,食草动物对其的侵害会增加。我们记录了引入澳大利亚东部的七个物种以及三个本地对照物种的标本馆标本上的叶片损伤情况。我们发现,自引入澳大利亚以来,外来植物遭受的食草动物侵害总体水平没有变化。
在入侵生态学领域,我们需要重新思考这样一种范式,即引入新范围的物种对食草动物的防御会简单地降低。相反,植物可能会采用一系列防御性状,这些性状会因应对大量不同的生物和非生物选择压力而以协调和相反的方式进化。