Exotic consumers interact with exotic plants to mediate native plant survival in a Midwestern forest herb layer

被引:0
|
作者
Philip G. Hahn
Mathew E. Dornbush
机构
[1] University of Wisconsin-Green Bay,Environmental Science and Policy Graduate Program
[2] University of Wisconsin-Madison,Department of Zoology
[3] University of Wisconsin-Green Bay,Department of Natural and Applied Sciences
来源
Biological Invasions | 2012年 / 14卷
关键词
Competition; Consumers; Garlic mustard; Herbivory; Invasive species; Mollusk; Slug;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Consumer-facilitated invasions have been proposed as an alternative mechanism to direct competitive exclusion to explain the replacement of native plants by exotics. In a factorial field experiment manipulating competition from the exotic plant Alliaria petiolata and herbivory by exotic mollusks, we documented that mollusk herbivory significantly reduced the survival of two species of native palatable plants, but found minimal direct herbivore effects on less palatable species, including the invasive A. petiolata. These effects were evident after one growing season on younger juvenile plants of Aster cordifolius, but only after two growing seasons on older transplants of the same species, suggesting a greater vulnerability of young plants. In contrast to our expectations, A. petiolata competition alone had no effect on any of the six native species we tested. However, competition from A. petiolata did affect the survival of the most palatable native plant when mollusks were also present. While not significant for any other single species, this same pattern was observed for three of the five remaining native species tested. The selective grazing on palatable plants that we document provides novel evidence contributing to our understanding of observed shifts in the forest herbaceous layer towards the dominance of exotic plants and unpalatable species. More broadly, our results highlight the importance of the interactive effect of consumers and inter-specific competition in forest understories via its contribution to differential survival among regenerating species.
引用
收藏
页码:449 / 460
页数:11
相关论文
共 46 条
  • [21] Properties of native plant communities do not determine exotic success during early forest succession
    Compagnoni, Aldo
    Halpern, Charles B.
    ECOGRAPHY, 2009, 32 (03) : 449 - 458
  • [22] Exotic weeds and fluctuating microclimate can constrain native plant regeneration in urban forest restoration
    Wallace, K. J.
    Laughlin, Daniel C.
    Clarkson, Bruce D.
    ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2017, 27 (04) : 1268 - 1279
  • [23] Cryptic seedling herbivory by nocturnal introduced generalists impacts survival, performance of native and exotic plants
    Strauss, Sharon Y.
    Stanton, Maureen L.
    Emery, Nancy C.
    Bradley, Carrie A.
    Carleton, Alexandra
    Dittrich-Reed, Dylan R.
    Ervin, Olivia A.
    Gray, Levi N.
    Hamilton, Andrew M.
    Rogge, Jennifer Harrington
    Harper, Skye D.
    Law, Kimberley Cook
    Pham, Vinh Q.
    Putnam, Matthew E.
    Roth, Tara M.
    Theil, Jacob H.
    Wells, Lara M.
    Yoshizuka, Eric M.
    ECOLOGY, 2009, 90 (02) : 419 - 429
  • [24] Native and exotic plant species diversity in forest fragments and forestry plantations of a coastal landscape of central Chile
    Becerra, Pablo, I
    Simonetti, Javier A.
    BOSQUE, 2020, 41 (02): : 125 - 136
  • [25] Plant effects on burrowing crab morphology in a Chinese salt marsh: Native vs. exotic plants
    Wang, Jin-qing
    Bertness, Mark D.
    Li, Bo
    Chen, Jia-kuan
    Lu, Wei-guang
    ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING, 2015, 74 : 376 - 384
  • [26] Heterospecific pollen transfer from an exotic plant to native plants: assessing reproductive consequences in an Andean grassland
    Carvallo, Gaston O.
    Medel, Rodrigo
    PLANT ECOLOGY & DIVERSITY, 2016, 9 (02) : 151 - 157
  • [27] Native plants play crucial role in buffering against severity of exotic plant invasions in freshwater ecosystems
    Fan, Shufeng
    Yu, Haihao
    Lv, Tian
    Yang, Lei
    Li, Yang
    Wang, Ligong
    Liu, Chunhua
    Yu, Dan
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2024, 299
  • [28] Consumers and establishment limitations contribute more than competitive interactions in sustaining dominance of the exotic herb garlic mustard in a Wisconsin, USA forest
    Mathew E. Dornbush
    Philip G. Hahn
    Biological Invasions, 2013, 15 : 2691 - 2706
  • [29] Consumers and establishment limitations contribute more than competitive interactions in sustaining dominance of the exotic herb garlic mustard in a Wisconsin, USA forest
    Dornbush, Mathew E.
    Hahn, Philip G.
    BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS, 2013, 15 (12) : 2691 - 2706
  • [30] Conversion of native forest to exotic Pinus radiata plantation: Response of understorey plant composition using a plant functional trait approach
    Meers, Trevor L.
    Kasel, Sabine
    Bell, Tina L.
    Enright, Neal J.
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2010, 259 (03) : 399 - 409