Title: Invading from the garden? A comparison of leaf herbivory for exotic and native plants in natural and ornamental settings

Abstract: The enemies release hypothesis proposes that exotic species can become invasive by escaping from predators and parasites in their novel environment. Agrawal et al. (Enemy release? An experiment with congeneric plant pairs and diverse above- and below-ground enemies. Ecology, 86, 2979–2989) proposed that areas or times in which damage to introduced species is low provide opportunities for the invasion of native habitat. We tested whether ornamental settings may provide areas with low levels of herbivory for trees and shrubs, potentially facilitating invasion success. First, we compared levels of leaf herbivory among native and exotic species in ornamental and natural settings in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. In the second study, we compared levels of herbivory for invasive and noninvasive exotic species between natural and ornamental settings. We found lower levels of leaf damage for exotic species than for native species; however, we found no differences in the amount of leaf damage suffered in ornamental or natural settings. Our results do not provide any evidence that ornamental settings afford additional release from herbivory for exotic plant species. [Matter, S. F., Brzyski, J. R., Harrison, C. J., Hyams, S., Loo, C., Loomis, J., Lubbers, H. R., Seastrum, L., Stamper, T. I., Stein, A. M., Stokes, R. and Wilkerson, B. S. (2012). Invading from the garden? A comparison of leaf herbivory for exotic and native plants in natural and ornamental settings. Insect Science. doi: 10.1111/j.1744-7917.2012.01524.x] Comment

Keywords: enemies release hypothesis; forest; herbivory; host plant; suburban; urban

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Article: WeedsNews3505 (permalink)
Categories: :WeedsNews:research alert, :WeedsNews:urban weeds
Date: 5 July 2012; 3:30:20 PM AEST

Author Name: David Low
Author ID: adminDavid