Costa E Silva João, Potts Brad M, Harrison Peter A
Centro de Estudos Florestais, Instituto Superior de Agronomia Universidade de Lisboa Lisboa Portugal.
School of Natural Sciences University of Tasmania Hobart Tasmania Australia.
Evol Appl. 2025 May 7;18(5):e70099. doi: 10.1111/eva.70099. eCollection 2025 May.
Native and restored forests are increasingly impacted by pests and diseases, including large herbivores. While community- and species-level impacts of these tree enemies are often well-documented, there is little understanding of their influence on finer-scale eco-evolutionary processes. We here study the influence of large-mammal herbivory on the survival and height growth of trees in a mixed species restoration planting of the Australian forest trees, and , in Tasmania, Australia. Common-garden field trials mixing the two species were compared in adjacent unbrowsed (fenced) and browsed (unfenced) plantings. The browsed planting was exposed to mammal browsing by native marsupials, as well as feral introduced European fallow deer (). Each tree species was represented by open-pollinated families from 22 paired geographic areas, allowing the assessment of the effects of browsing on the species and population differences, as well as on family variation within each species. In the browsed planting, a marked reduction in species and population differences, as well as in family variance, was observed for both height growth and survival. The pattern of height growth and survival of the populations of both species also differed between browsing regimes, with significant changes of climate relationships involving both focal tree attributes detected. Our results argue for a major disruption of the eco-evolutionary dynamics of restored forests in the presence of browsing by large mammalian herbivores, at the observed period of the tree life cycle. Importantly for forest restoration and conservation in the face of global change, our results challenge the choice of tree populations for translocation based solely on predicted or observed relationships of their home-site climate with current and predicted future climates of the restoration sites, while emphasising the need for genetic diversity to provide future resilience of restored forests to both biotic and abiotic stresses.
原生森林和恢复后的森林越来越受到包括大型食草动物在内的病虫害的影响。虽然这些树木天敌在群落和物种层面的影响往往有充分的记录,但人们对它们在更精细尺度的生态进化过程中的影响却知之甚少。我们在此研究了大型哺乳动物啃食对澳大利亚塔斯马尼亚州两种澳大利亚森林树木混交种恢复种植中树木存活和高度生长的影响。在相邻的未被啃食(围栏)和被啃食(未围栏)种植区,对混合这两个物种的共同花园田间试验进行了比较。被啃食的种植区受到本地有袋动物以及引入的野生欧洲黇鹿的哺乳动物啃食。每个树种由来自22对地理区域的开放授粉家系代表,从而能够评估啃食对物种和种群差异以及每个物种内家系变异的影响。在被啃食的种植区,观察到高度生长和存活方面的物种和种群差异以及家系方差都显著降低。两种树种种群的高度生长和存活模式在啃食状态之间也有所不同,检测到涉及两种目标树木属性的气候关系有显著变化。我们的结果表明,在树木生命周期的观察期内,大型哺乳动物食草动物的啃食会对恢复森林的生态进化动态造成重大破坏。面对全球变化,对于森林恢复和保护而言重要的是,我们的结果对仅基于树木原生地气候与恢复地点当前和预测未来气候的预测或观察关系来选择用于迁移的树木种群提出了挑战,同时强调了遗传多样性对于使恢复森林未来能够抵御生物和非生物胁迫的必要性。