4.5 Article

Combined effects of plant competition and insect herbivory hinder invasiveness of an introduced thistle

Journal

OECOLOGIA
Volume 169, Issue 2, Pages 467-476

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-011-2207-6

Keywords

Biotic resistance; Bull thistle; Spear thistle; Cirsium vulgare; Tall thistle; Cirsium altissimum; Exotic plants; Insect herbivory; Insect-plant interactions; Invasive species; Seedling regeneration

Categories

Funding

  1. Nature Conservancy-Nebraska Chapter
  2. John Davidson Scholarship
  3. School of Biological Sciences at University of Nebraska
  4. NSF-DEB [0532018]
  5. USDA [NRI-2005-35320-15379]
  6. Division Of Environmental Biology
  7. Direct For Biological Sciences [0532018] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The biotic resistance hypothesis is a dominant paradigm for why some introduced species fail to become invasive in novel environments. However, predictions of this hypothesis require further empirical field tests. Here, we focus on evaluating two biotic factors known to severely limit plants, interspecific competition and insect herbivory, as mechanisms of biotic resistance. We experimentally evaluated the independent and combined effects of three levels of competition by tallgrass prairie vegetation and two levels of herbivory by native insects on seedling regeneration, size, and subsequent flowering of the Eurasian , a known invasive species elsewhere, and compared its responses to those of the ecologically similar and co-occurring native congener . Seedling emergence of was greater than that of and that emergence was reduced by the highest level of interspecific competition. Insect leaf herbivory was also greater on than on at all levels of competition. Herbivory on seedlings dramatically decreased the proportion of producing flower heads at all competition levels, but especially at the high competition level. Competition and herbivory interacted to significantly decrease plant survival and biomass, especially for . Thus, both competition and herbivory limited regeneration of both thistles, but their effects on seedling emergence, survival, size and subsequent reproduction were greater for than for These results help explain the unexpectedly low abundance recorded for in western tallgrass prairie, and also provide strong support for the biotic resistance hypothesis.

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