Faculty of Forestry and Wood Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences, Suchdol, 165 00 Prague, Czechia.
Scion (New Zealand Forest Research Institute), Christchurch 8440, New Zealand.
Curr Biol. 2024 Nov 18;34(22):5374-5381.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2024.09.068. Epub 2024 Oct 22.
Globalization has spread thousands of invasive insect species into new world regions, causing severe losses in ecosystem services. Previous work proposed that plant invasions facilitate insect invasions through the creation of niches for non-native herbivores. Despite the impact of insect invasions, a comprehensive understanding is lacking on how invasion success varies among insect feeding groups. We therefore compiled the predominant larval trophic groups (herbivores, predators, parasites, detritivores, and brood-carers) for 5,839 non-native insect species in nine world regions to compare (1) proportions of species in each group between non-native species and the world's fauna, (2) how invasion success for each trophic group has changed over the last three centuries, and (3) how historical herbivore invasions are related to plant invasions over time and parasite invasions are related to herbivores. We find that herbivores represent a significantly larger proportion (52.4%) among non-native insects compared with the world fauna (38.4%), whereas proportions of non-native detritivores (including fungivores), predators, and brood-carers are significantly lower; parasite proportions do not significantly differ. Predators and detritivores dominated among invasions in the 18th century but subsequently diminished, likely due to changing invasion pathways, whereas proportions of herbivores, parasites, and brood-carers increased over time. We found herbivore invasions to lag 80 years behind plant invasions, whereas parasitoids appear to co-invade with their herbivore hosts. The dominance of herbivores among non-native insects and their strong cross-correlation with plant invasions further strengthens the hypothesis that plant invasions drive the global rise in numbers of non-native insects.
全球化使数千种入侵昆虫进入新的世界区域,对生态系统服务造成严重损失。先前的研究提出,植物入侵通过为非本地食草动物创造生态位,促进了昆虫的入侵。尽管昆虫入侵的影响很大,但对于不同取食类群的入侵成功率如何变化,我们仍缺乏全面的了解。因此,我们编译了九个世界区域的 5839 种非本地昆虫的主要幼虫营养组(食草动物、捕食者、寄生虫、碎屑动物和育幼动物),以比较(1)每个组中非本地物种与世界动物群中物种的比例;(2)每个营养组的入侵成功率在过去三个世纪中的变化情况;(3)历史上的食草动物入侵与植物入侵以及寄生虫入侵与食草动物入侵之间的关系。我们发现,与世界动物群(38.4%)相比,食草动物在非本地昆虫中所占的比例(52.4%)显著较大,而非本地碎屑动物(包括真菌食者)、捕食者和育幼动物的比例则显著较低;寄生虫的比例没有显著差异。在 18 世纪的入侵中,捕食者和碎屑动物占主导地位,但随后减少,这可能是由于入侵途径的变化,而食草动物、寄生虫和育幼动物的比例随着时间的推移而增加。我们发现食草动物的入侵滞后于植物入侵 80 年,而寄生蜂似乎与它们的食草动物宿主共同入侵。非本地昆虫中食草动物的主导地位及其与植物入侵的强烈互相关联,进一步强化了植物入侵驱动全球非本地昆虫数量增加的假说。