Abstract
Herbivory and disturbance are major drivers of biological invasions, but it is unclear how they interact to determine exotic vs. native seedling recruitment and what consequences arise for biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Previous studies neglected the roles of different, potentially interacting, guilds of generalist herbivores such as rodents and gastropods. We therefore set up a full-factorial rodent exclusion x gastropod exclusion x disturbance x seed-addition experiment in a grassland community in Central Germany and measured early seedling recruitment, as well as species richness, species composition and aboveground biomass. Gastropod herbivory reduced the positive effect of disturbance on seedling recruitment, particularly for exotic species. Rodent herbivory had weak positive effects on seedling recruitment at undisturbed sites, irrespective of species origin. This effect was likely driven by their strong negative effect on productivity. Interactive effects between both herbivore guilds became only evident for species richness and composition. How many species established themselves depended on disturbance, but was independent of species origin. The fewer exotic species that established themselves increased productivity to a stronger extent compared to native species. Our study highlights that joint effects of disturbance, herbivory and species origin shape early recruitment, while they only weakly affect biodiversity and ecosystem functioning.
Highlights
Herbivory and disturbance are major drivers of biological invasions, but it is unclear how they interact to determine exotic vs. native seedling recruitment and what consequences arise for biodiversity and ecosystem functioning
For the proportion of seedling recruitment this effect differed between functional groups and species origins (Table 1)
Seedling recruitment of legumes was significantly reduced by gastropod herbivory in disturbed compared to undisturbed plots
Summary
Herbivory and disturbance are major drivers of biological invasions, but it is unclear how they interact to determine exotic vs. native seedling recruitment and what consequences arise for biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Studies on the effects of generalist herbivores on early seedling recruitment and establishment success have provided inconsistent results, as they found stronger[13,14], equal[2,15,16] or weaker[17,18] effects on exotic compared to native species. This apparent inconsistency may at least be partly explained by the different feeding preferences of the key herbivores in the particular study system. Feeding preferences of rodents differ between granivorous and herbivorous rodents: while granivorous rodents are known to preferentially consume seeds of large-seeded species, herbivorous rodents such as voles consume biomass of grasses that is available[25], or of legumes that is highly nutritious[26]
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