1 / 16

Enemy Release Hypothesis

Enemy Release Hypothesis. Invasive Species Seminar 2 September 2004. Overview. Definition of terms Enemy Release Hypothesis (ERH): Evolution of Increased Competitive Ability Hypothesis (EICA) Distinctions made in Colautti et al review Differences in biogeographic versus community effects

karan
Télécharger la présentation

Enemy Release Hypothesis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Enemy Release Hypothesis Invasive Species Seminar 2 September 2004

  2. Overview • Definition of terms • Enemy Release Hypothesis (ERH): • Evolution of Increased Competitive Ability Hypothesis (EICA) • Distinctions made in Colautti et al review • Differences in biogeographic versus community effects • Cautions regarding interpretation of results

  3. ERH • Enemy release hypothesis (ERH): • Invasive species encounter fewer natural enemies in areas they invade compared to their native areas (they leave behind their enemies)

  4. ERH • Enemy release hypothesis (ERH): • Invasive species encounter fewer natural enemies in areas they invade compared to their native areas (they leave behind their enemies) • Two mechanisms of release: • Regulatory – invader escapes damage (not well defended in home range) • Compensatory – invader reallocates resources from defense to growth (invader well defended in home range)

  5. ERH • Enemy release hypothesis (ERH): • Invasive species encounter fewer natural enemies in areas they invade compared to their native areas (they leave behind their enemies) • Two mechanisms of release: • Regulatory – invader escapes damage (not well defended in home range) • Compensatory – invader reallocates resources from defense to growth (invader well defended in home range)

  6. Compensatory Release • Ecological time - Plasticity • The invader reallocates resources from defense to growth • Moderate time lag

  7. Compensatory Release • Evolutionary time - Evolution of increased competitive ability hypothesis (EICA) (Blossey and Nötzold 1995) • Compared seeds of purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria) from native and invading populations, grown together in one location • Plants from invading population were taller and had greater final biomass

  8. Compensatory Release • Evolutionary time - Evolution of increased competitive ability hypothesis (EICA) (Rogers and Siemann 2003, 2004) • Herbivore preferred invasive ecotype over native ecotype of Chinese tallow tree (Sapium sebiferum)

  9. Compensatory Release • Evolutionary time - Evolution of increased competitive ability hypothesis (EICA) (Rogers and Siemann 2003, 2004) • Herbivore preferred invasive ecotype over native ecotype of Chinese tallow tree (Sapium sebiferum) • Invasive ecotype was able to recover from both foliar and root damage, while native ecotype was negatively affected (did not compensate even with fertilizer addition)

  10. Compensatory Release • Evolutionary time - Evolution of increased competitive ability hypothesis (EICA) (Rogers and Siemann 2003, 2004) • Herbivore preferred invasive ecotype over native ecotype of Chinese tallow tree (Sapium sebiferum) • Invasive ecotype was able to recover from both foliar and root damage, while native ecotype was negatively affected (did not compensate even with fertilizer addition) • Recent work of Blossey (TREE, soon)

  11. Colautti et al Review • Difference of scale • Biogeographic level – more support for ERH, but must interpret with caution • Counts or effect? • Intraspecific • Release or exchange? • Community level – less support for ERH

  12. Colautti et al Review • Other factors • Propagule bias – fewer compared to what? • Invasion bottlenecks – invasions are a subsample • Additional hypotheses

  13. Colautti et al Review • Other factors • Propagule bias – fewer compared to what? • Invasion bottlenecks – invasions are a subsample • Additional hypotheses • Increased susceptibility • Enemy inversion • Enemy of my enemies

  14. Discussion • What’s really going on? Can invasiveness be described by a single hypothesis, or does it differ case by case?

  15. Discussion • What’s really going on? Can invasiveness be described by a single hypothesis, or does it differ case by case? • Now what? Should we do more experiments to gather evidence on additional cases, or should we do different experiments to test invasiveness more effectively? If so, how?

  16. Discussion • What’s really going on? Can invasiveness be described by a single hypothesis, or does it differ case by case? • Now what? Should we do more experiments to gather evidence on additional cases, or should we do different experiments to test invasiveness more effectively? If so, how? • Can we anticipate different cases? What if a known invasive arrives at a new location? Will it behave the same way as before? What about other factors that are changing e.g. climate, land use, etc.

More Related