Alien Plants are Less Palatable to Pest Herbivores than Native Plants: Evidence from Cafeteria Experiments in Search of Suitable Plant Species to Restore Degraded Ecosystems

Nowadays, the ecology and evolutionary potential of alien species are the subjects of several ecological studies. The goal of this study was to compare the feeding preference of Arion ater on seedlings and leaves of alien and native plant species. Seedlings of three native species and one alien spec...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gamoun Mouldi, Louhaichi Mounir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2021-03-01
Series:Ekológia (Bratislava)
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/eko-2021-0003
id doaj-75b46f7c8117406b8608088ab4708914
record_format Article
spelling doaj-75b46f7c8117406b8608088ab47089142021-09-05T21:00:47ZengSciendoEkológia (Bratislava)1337-947X2021-03-01401162410.2478/eko-2021-0003Alien Plants are Less Palatable to Pest Herbivores than Native Plants: Evidence from Cafeteria Experiments in Search of Suitable Plant Species to Restore Degraded EcosystemsGamoun Mouldi0Louhaichi Mounir1Department of Ecology and Animal Biology, University of Vigo, Vigo, 36310 Pontevedra, SpainInternational Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA)Tunis, TunisiaNowadays, the ecology and evolutionary potential of alien species are the subjects of several ecological studies. The goal of this study was to compare the feeding preference of Arion ater on seedlings and leaves of alien and native plant species. Seedlings of three native species and one alien species were offered to slugs individually and in combination. Afterward, leaf discs from the native and alien species collected from the same source site of slug’s habitat were offered individually and in combination for slugs. When the new plant emerges, it constitutes a generous source of potential food and slugs would even feed on seedlings, which are not particularly palatable. Nonetheless, when given a choice, slug often preferentially feeds on some food items while ignoring others. Alien plants are more resistant to herbivory than native plants. There is a general tendency for alien species to be less palatable than native species. In general, slugs may eat a wide range of seedlings that are much more attractive than mature plants of the same species. Therefore, the native herbivores were found to attack native plants and promoted alien plants. Consequently, highly unacceptable alien species such as Eucalyptus globulus may play an important role in the restoration process.https://doi.org/10.2478/eko-2021-0003eucalyptus globulusfeedingherbivorynative
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gamoun Mouldi
Louhaichi Mounir
spellingShingle Gamoun Mouldi
Louhaichi Mounir
Alien Plants are Less Palatable to Pest Herbivores than Native Plants: Evidence from Cafeteria Experiments in Search of Suitable Plant Species to Restore Degraded Ecosystems
Ekológia (Bratislava)
eucalyptus globulus
feeding
herbivory
native
author_facet Gamoun Mouldi
Louhaichi Mounir
author_sort Gamoun Mouldi
title Alien Plants are Less Palatable to Pest Herbivores than Native Plants: Evidence from Cafeteria Experiments in Search of Suitable Plant Species to Restore Degraded Ecosystems
title_short Alien Plants are Less Palatable to Pest Herbivores than Native Plants: Evidence from Cafeteria Experiments in Search of Suitable Plant Species to Restore Degraded Ecosystems
title_full Alien Plants are Less Palatable to Pest Herbivores than Native Plants: Evidence from Cafeteria Experiments in Search of Suitable Plant Species to Restore Degraded Ecosystems
title_fullStr Alien Plants are Less Palatable to Pest Herbivores than Native Plants: Evidence from Cafeteria Experiments in Search of Suitable Plant Species to Restore Degraded Ecosystems
title_full_unstemmed Alien Plants are Less Palatable to Pest Herbivores than Native Plants: Evidence from Cafeteria Experiments in Search of Suitable Plant Species to Restore Degraded Ecosystems
title_sort alien plants are less palatable to pest herbivores than native plants: evidence from cafeteria experiments in search of suitable plant species to restore degraded ecosystems
publisher Sciendo
series Ekológia (Bratislava)
issn 1337-947X
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Nowadays, the ecology and evolutionary potential of alien species are the subjects of several ecological studies. The goal of this study was to compare the feeding preference of Arion ater on seedlings and leaves of alien and native plant species. Seedlings of three native species and one alien species were offered to slugs individually and in combination. Afterward, leaf discs from the native and alien species collected from the same source site of slug’s habitat were offered individually and in combination for slugs. When the new plant emerges, it constitutes a generous source of potential food and slugs would even feed on seedlings, which are not particularly palatable. Nonetheless, when given a choice, slug often preferentially feeds on some food items while ignoring others. Alien plants are more resistant to herbivory than native plants. There is a general tendency for alien species to be less palatable than native species. In general, slugs may eat a wide range of seedlings that are much more attractive than mature plants of the same species. Therefore, the native herbivores were found to attack native plants and promoted alien plants. Consequently, highly unacceptable alien species such as Eucalyptus globulus may play an important role in the restoration process.
topic eucalyptus globulus
feeding
herbivory
native
url https://doi.org/10.2478/eko-2021-0003
work_keys_str_mv AT gamounmouldi alienplantsarelesspalatabletopestherbivoresthannativeplantsevidencefromcafeteriaexperimentsinsearchofsuitableplantspeciestorestoredegradedecosystems
AT louhaichimounir alienplantsarelesspalatabletopestherbivoresthannativeplantsevidencefromcafeteriaexperimentsinsearchofsuitableplantspeciestorestoredegradedecosystems
_version_ 1717782275482976256