Abstract
A majority of the plant species that are introduced into new ranges either do not become established, or become naturalized yet do not attain high densities and are thus considered ecologically and economically unproblematic. The factors that limit these relatively “benign” species are not well studied. The biotic resistance hypothesis predicts that herbivores, pathogens and competition reduce growth and reproduction of individual plants and so suppress population growth of non-native species. We explored the effect of insect herbivory and surrounding vegetation on growth and fitness of the non-native biennial plant Verbascum thapsus (common mullein) in Colorado, USA. Mullein is widespread in its introduced North American range, yet is infrequently considered a management concern because populations are often ephemeral and restricted to disturbed sites. To evaluate the impact of insect herbivores on mullein performance, we reduced herbivory using an insecticide treatment and compared sprayed plants to those exposed to ambient levels of herbivory. Reducing herbivory increased survival from rosette to reproduction by 7%, from 70–77%. Of plants that survived, reducing herbivory increased plant area in the first year and plant height, the length of the reproductive spike, and seed set during the second year. Reducing herbivory also had a marked effect on plant fitness, increasing seed set by 50%, from about 48,000 seeds per plant under ambient herbivory to about 98,000 per plant under reduced herbivory. Our findings also highlight that the relationship between herbivory and performance is complex. Among plants exposed to ambient herbivory, we observed a positive relationship between damage and performance, suggesting that, as predicted by the plant vigor hypothesis, insect herbivores choose the largest plants for feeding when their choice is not restricted by insecticide treatment. In contrast to the strong effects of experimentally reduced herbivory, we found that cover of other plants surrounding our focal plants explained relatively little variation in performance outcomes. Overall, we found that herbivore-induced impacts on individual plant performance and seed set are substantial, and thus may help prevent this naturalized species from becoming dominant in undisturbed recipient communities.
Highlights
There are over 29 published hypotheses addressing the success of introduced species in their new range (Catford et al 2009)
We investigated whether the water added in the ambient herbivory treatment increased plant performance by comparing those plants to the additional 42 plants that received no treatment
Insecticide treatment reduced attack by the seed-feeding weevil G. tetrum (F1,96, P < 0.0001) from 24% in water controls to 20% in the insecticide treated plants
Summary
There are over 29 published hypotheses addressing the success of introduced species in their new range (Catford et al 2009). In the native ranges of plants, herbivores and pathogens can strongly reduce plant performance (Bigger and Marvier 1998; Carson and Root 1999, Maron and Crone 2006; Morris et al 2007), and in cases this can be paralleled in the introduced range when native generalist herbivores (Parker et al 2006) or introduced specialist herbivores As such, investigating the degree to which insect herbivores mediate the performance of non-native plants may provide a unique perspective for understanding the spectrum of invasiveness among introduced species
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