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Non‐Native, Non‐Naturalised Plants Suffer Less Herbivory Than Native Plants Across European Botanical Gardens

Ivison, Katy; van Kleunen, Mark; Speed, James D. M.; Vange, Vibekke; Pujara, Sonia; Boch, Steffen; Enters, Dirk; Groom, Quentin; Janovský, Zdeněk; Jeschke, Jonathan M.; Joshi, Jasmin; Kolb, Annette; Kollmann, Johannes; Koubek, Tomáš; Lemke, Tristan; Matthies, Diethart; Raabová, Jana; Tielbörger, Katja; Dawson, Wayne

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Authors

Katy Ivison katharine.e.ivison@durham.ac.uk
PGR Student Doctor of Philosophy

Mark van Kleunen

James D. M. Speed

Vibekke Vange

Sonia Pujara

Steffen Boch

Dirk Enters

Quentin Groom

Zdeněk Janovský

Jonathan M. Jeschke

Jasmin Joshi

Annette Kolb

Johannes Kollmann

Tomáš Koubek

Tristan Lemke

Diethart Matthies

Jana Raabová

Katja Tielbörger



Abstract

Aim: The enemy release hypothesis states that the invasion success of non‐native species is partly due to their escape from natural enemies, e.g., herbivores. Large‐scale studies of herbivory using multiple species across multiple sites are needed to test the generality of herbivory release in non‐native plants. Location: Europe. Methods: We carried out leaf‐herbivory surveys from 2007 to 2021 in 15 botanical gardens ranging in latitude from 47°N (Switzerland) to 63°N (Norway) to investigate how herbivory levels differed between (i) native and non‐native species, and (ii) native and non‐naturalised or naturalised species. Results: Overall, we found that herbivory levels were lower on non‐native than native species. In addition, we found that non‐naturalised plants suffered less herbivory than natives and that naturalised plants showed similar levels of herbivory to native plants. Main Conclusions: We find broad support for lower herbivory of non‐native plant species compared to natives. However, the stronger reduction in herbivory for non‐naturalised plants suggests that herbivore release may be transient and less pronounced for naturalised non‐native species that have become abundant and integrated into resident communities. This has implications for the management of naturalised non‐native plants, which are performing well in their non‐native ranges despite suffering comparable herbivory levels to native species.

Citation

Ivison, K., van Kleunen, M., Speed, J., Vange, V., Pujara, S., Boch, S., Enters, D., Groom, Q., Janovský, Z., Jeschke, J., Joshi, J., Kolb, A., Kollmann, J., Koubek, T., Lemke, T., Matthies, D., Raabová, J., Tielbörger, K., & Dawson, W. (online). Non‐Native, Non‐Naturalised Plants Suffer Less Herbivory Than Native Plants Across European Botanical Gardens. Diversity and Distributions, Article e13938. https://doi.org/10.1111/ddi.13938

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 8, 2024
Online Publication Date Oct 30, 2024
Deposit Date Nov 8, 2024
Publicly Available Date Nov 8, 2024
Journal Diversity and Distributions
Print ISSN 1366-9516
Electronic ISSN 1472-4642
Publisher Wiley Open Access
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Article Number e13938
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/ddi.13938
Keywords non‐native species, Europe, latitudinal gradient, herbivory, naturalisation, botanic gardens, enemy release
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3045100

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