Abstract

Abstract Biotic resistance to alien plant invasions is mainly determined by ecological interactions in two layers of the food web: competition with native plant species and herbivory by native herbivores. While the direct effect of native plants on alien plant performance via competition has been well documented across ecosystems, less is known about the direct and indirect effects of herbivores in providing biotic resistance. Our main aims were to determine whether temperate native aquatic plants and herbivores can provide biotic resistance to plant invasions, understand the underlying mechanisms and search for potential interactive effects of competition and herbivory on invader performance (i.e. growth). We mimicked natural temperate mesotrophic and eutrophic freshwater lakes in mesoscosms, by growing three native submerged plant species in monocultures (Ceratophyllum demersum, Myriophyllum spicatum and Potamogeton perfoliatus) at three competition levels (no, low and high) without and with the native aquatic generalist snail Lymnaea stagnalis. We subsequently simulated an early stage of establishment of the South American highly invasive alien plant species Egeria densa. We found that competition by native plant biomass significantly reduced invader performance but depended on native species identity. Herbivory had no direct negative effect on invader performance as the snails fed mainly on the available filamentous algae, which are commonly found in meso‐ and eutrophic systems, instead of on the plants. However, the consumption of filamentous algae by herbivores indirectly had positive effects on the invader total biomass, thus facilitating the invasion by E. densa. Nonetheless, these indirect effects worked through different pathways depending on the native plant identity. Synthesis. We found evidence for biotic resistance through competition by native plant species. However, we show that herbivores can indirectly facilitate South American plant E. densa invasion promoting its growth through selective feeding on filamentous algae, but this effect depends on the native plant species involved. Our experiment illustrates the important role of indirect interactions to understand the potential of biotic resistance in natural ecosystems.

Highlights

  • With the intensification of trade, transport and tourism, the number of alien species introductions has significantly increased in the last centuries (Meyerson & Mooney, 2013)

  • We found that competition by native plant biomass significantly reduced invader performance but depended on native species identity

  • We show that herbivores can indirectly facilitate South American plant E. densa invasion promoting its growth through selective feeding on filamentous algae, but this effect depends on the native plant species involved

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

With the intensification of trade, transport and tourism, the number of alien species introductions has significantly increased in the last centuries (Meyerson & Mooney, 2013). Filamentous green algae often grow on aquatic plants in mesotrophic and eutrophic conditions; their removal by herbivores can promote the growth of plants by reducing the negative effects of shading and nutrient competition which would have an indirect effect on either the invading, native or both native and invading plant species (no overall effect; Bakker, Dobrescu, Straile, & Holmgren, 2013; Brönmark, 1985, 1990; Hidding, Bakker, Hootsmans, & Hilt, 2016) This makes freshwater ecosystems excellent model systems in which to study this real-world complexity including both direct and indirect effects on biotic resistance. Herbivores would indirectly affect the invader E. densa biomass by either (3) selective feeding on the native plants, thereby reducing the direct competitive effect of native plants on E. densa promoting its growth (H3, dashed and solid arrows, Figure 1) or (4) by selective feeding on the biomass of filamentous green algae, thereby reducing the competitive effect of filamentous algae on E. densa (H4, dashed arrows, Figure 1) or indirectly increasing competition between the native and invading plant species (H4, dashed and solid arrows, Figure 1)

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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