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Title

Insect herbivory and propagule pressure influence Cirsium vulgare invasiveness across the landscape.

Authors

Eckberg, James O.; Tenhumberg, Brigitte; Louda, Svata M.

Abstract

A current challenge in ecology is to better understand the magnitude, variation, and interaction in the factors that limit the invasiveness of exotic species. We conducted a factorial experiment involving herbivore manipulation (insecticide-in-water vs. water-only control) and seven densities of introduced nonnative Cirsium vulgare (bull thistle) seed. The experiment was repeated with two seed cohorts at eight grassland sites uninvaded by C. vulgare in the central Great Plains, USA. Herbivory by native insects significantly reduced thistle seedling density, causing the largest reductions in density at the highest propagule inputs. The magnitude of this herbivore effect varied widely among sites and between cohort years. The combination of herbivory and lower propagule pressure increased the rate at which new C. vulgare populations failed to establish during the initial stages of invasion. This experiment demonstrates that the interaction between biotic resistance by native insects, propagule pressure, and spatiotemporal variation in their effects were crucial to the initial invasion by this Eurasian plant in the western tallgrass prairie.

Subjects

UNITED States; CIRSIUM; BIOLOGICAL variation; ASTERACEAE; HERBIVORES

Publication

Ecology, 2012, Vol 93, Issue 8, p1787

ISSN

0012-9658

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1890/11-1583.1

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