Journal
BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS
Volume 24, Issue 9, Pages 2665-2677Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10530-022-02810-w
Keywords
Alien species; Native; Introduced; Herbivory; Plant invasion; Weeds
Categories
Funding
- CAUL
- New Zealand Tertiary Education Commission CoRE grant
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The enemy release hypothesis suggests that introduced plants can spread rapidly in new environments due to their lack of co-evolved natural enemies. This study examined insect diversity and abundance, measured herbivore damage, and plant biomass to investigate enemy release.
The enemy release hypothesis states that introduced plants have a competitive advantage due to their release from co-evolved natural enemies (i.e., herbivores and pathogens), which allows them to spread rapidly in new environments. This hypothesis has received mixed support to date, but previous studies have rarely examined the herbivore community, plant damage, and performance simultaneously and largely ignored below-ground herbivores. We tested for enemy release by conducting large scale field surveys of insect diversity and abundance in both the native (United Kingdom) and introduced (New Zealand) ranges of three dock (Rumex, Polygonaceae) species: R. conglomeratus Murray (clustered dock), R. crispus L. (curly dock) and R. obtusifolius L. (broad-leaved dock). We captured both above- and below-ground insect herbivores, measured herbivore damage, and plant biomass as an indicator for performance. In the introduced range, Rumex plants had a lower diversity of insect herbivores, all insect specialists present in the native range were absent and plants had lower levels of herbivore damage on both roots and leaves. Despite this, only R. crispus had greater fresh weight in the introduced range compared to the native range. This suggests that enemy release, particularly from below-ground herbivores, could be a driver for the success of R. crispus plants in New Zealand, but not for R. conglomeratus and R. obtusifolius.
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