Morrison Janet A, Woldemariam Melkamu
Department of Biology The College of New Jersey Ewing New Jersey USA.
Ecol Evol. 2022 Nov 8;12(11):e9475. doi: 10.1002/ece3.9475. eCollection 2022 Nov.
Trees and shrubs in suburban forests can be subject to chronic herbivory from abundant white-tailed deer, influencing survival, growth, secondary metabolites, and ecological success in the community. We investigated how deer affect the size, cover, and metabolomes of four species in the understory of a suburban forest in central New Jersey, USA: the woody shrubs and , the tree , and the semi-woody shrub . For each species, we compared plants in 38 16 m plots with or without deer exclosure, measuring proportion cover and mean height after 6.5 years of fencing. We scored each species in all plots for deer browsing over 8 years and assessed selection by deer among the species. We did untargeted metabolomics by sampling leaves from three plants of each species in an equal number of fenced and unfenced plots, conducting chloroform-methanol extractions followed by LC-MS/MS, and conducting statistical analysis on MetaboAnalyst. The proportion of a species browsed ranged from 0.24 to 0.35. appeared most selected by and susceptible to deer; in unfenced plots, both its cover and mean height were significantly lower. Only cover or height was lower for and in unfenced plots, while height was greater. The metabolomic analysis identified 2333 metabolites, which clustered by species but not fencing treatment. However, targeted analysis of the top metabolites grouped by fencing for all samples and for each species alone and was especially clear in , which also grouped by fencing using all metabolites. The most significant metabolites that were upregulated in fenced plants include some involved in defense-related metabolic pathways, e.g., monoterpenoid biosynthesis. In overbrowsed suburban forests, variation of deer impact on species' ecological success, potentially mediated by metabolome-wide chemical responses to deer, may contribute to changes in community structure.
郊区森林中的树木和灌木可能会受到大量白尾鹿长期啃食的影响,这会影响其生存、生长、次生代谢产物以及群落中的生态演替。我们研究了鹿如何影响美国新泽西州中部一个郊区森林林下四种植物的大小、覆盖度和代谢组:木本灌木 和 、乔木 以及半木本灌木 。对于每个物种,我们在38个16平方米的样地中比较了有或没有防鹿围栏的植物,在围栏6.5年后测量了覆盖比例和平均高度。我们对所有样地中的每个物种在8年时间里的鹿啃食情况进行了评分,并评估了鹿对这些物种的选择情况。我们通过在数量相等的有围栏和无围栏样地中,从每个物种的三株植物上采集叶子进行非靶向代谢组学分析,进行氯仿 - 甲醇提取,然后进行液相色谱 - 串联质谱分析,并在MetaboAnalyst上进行统计分析。一个物种被啃食的比例在0.24到0.35之间。 似乎最受鹿的选择且最易受到鹿的影响;在无围栏样地中,其覆盖度和平均高度都显著较低。在无围栏样地中, 和 的覆盖度或高度仅较低,而 的高度更高。代谢组学分析鉴定出2333种代谢产物,这些代谢产物按物种聚类,但不按围栏处理聚类。然而,对所有样本以及单独对每个物种按围栏分组的顶级代谢产物进行靶向分析,在 中尤为明显,使用所有代谢产物时 也按围栏分组。在有围栏植物中上调的最显著代谢产物包括一些参与防御相关代谢途径的物质,例如单萜生物合成。在过度啃食的郊区森林中,鹿对物种生态演替的影响差异,可能由对鹿的全代谢组化学响应介导,这可能导致群落结构的变化。