Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2760189255> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2760189255 endingPage "3021" @default.
- W2760189255 startingPage "3011" @default.
- W2760189255 abstract "Plant-herbivore interactions have been predicted to play a fundamental role in plant invasions, although support for this assertion from previous research is mixed. While plants may escape from specialist herbivores in their introduced ranges, herbivory from generalists is common. Tolerance traits may allow non-native plants to mitigate the negative consequences of generalist herbivory that they cannot avoid in their introduced range. Here we address whether tolerance to herbivory, quantified as survival and compensatory growth, is associated with plant invasion success in Hawaii and investigate traits that may enhance tolerance in seedlings, the life stage most susceptible to herbivory. In a greenhouse experiment, we measured seedling tolerance to simulated herbivory through mechanical damage (50% leaf removal) of 16 non-native woody plant species differing in invasion status (invasive vs. non-invasive). Seedlings were grown for 2 weeks following damage and analyzed for biomass to determine whether damaged plants could fully compensate for the lost leaf tissue. Over 99% of all seedlings survived defoliation. Although species varied significantly in their levels of compensation, there was no consistent difference between invasive and non-invasive species. Seedlings of 11 species undercompensated and remained substantially smaller than control seedlings 2 weeks after damage; four species were close to compensating, while one species overcompensated. Across species, compensation was positively associated with an increased investment in potential storage reserves, specifically cotyledons and roots, suggesting that these organs provide resources that help seedlings re-grow following damage. Our results add to a growing consensus that pre-damage growth patterns determine tolerance to damage, even in young seedlings which have relatively low biomass. The lack of higher tolerance in highly invasive species may suggest that invaders overcome herbivory barriers to invasion in other ways, such as resistance traits, or that herbivory does not play an important role in the seedling invasion dynamics of these woody species in Hawaii." @default.
- W2760189255 created "2017-10-06" @default.
- W2760189255 creator A5012261973 @default.
- W2760189255 creator A5028363219 @default.
- W2760189255 creator A5056611434 @default.
- W2760189255 date "2017-12-01" @default.
- W2760189255 modified "2023-10-01" @default.
- W2760189255 title "Pre-damage biomass allocation and not invasiveness predicts tolerance to damage in seedlings of woody species in Hawaii" @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1234415076 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1486289445 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1496528644 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1521730815 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1529372257 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1586929055 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1591036448 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W15971075 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W176812069 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1963914661 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1964003550 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1966175318 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1966431647 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1971770582 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1972814366 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1976057817 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1980420407 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1990735677 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1990864500 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1993317372 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1996130715 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W1997941140 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2000837144 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2006864956 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2010568002 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2011452395 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2012385334 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2012543820 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2014268862 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2033453303 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2035862639 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2037785667 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2041874267 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2048991116 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2053790258 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2054585586 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2058855508 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2070833356 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2072111972 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2072677645 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2078983858 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2080244330 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2081203178 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2085130525 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2085614399 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2090946640 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2101116273 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2114126703 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2117456634 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2118677038 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2120062081 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2120865110 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2126547173 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2129025129 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2133098229 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2134212722 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2136036295 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2137670568 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2142525002 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2142623180 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2143153544 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2143552454 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2144450527 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2144510109 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2147134194 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2150707202 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2150998549 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2151101996 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2157560775 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2159550677 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2163826476 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2170702701 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2178042675 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2222992418 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W2336563545 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W301768791 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W4251630950 @default.
- W2760189255 cites W845925963 @default.
- W2760189255 doi "https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.2031" @default.
- W2760189255 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28940318" @default.
- W2760189255 hasPublicationYear "2017" @default.
- W2760189255 type Work @default.
- W2760189255 sameAs 2760189255 @default.
- W2760189255 citedByCount "11" @default.
- W2760189255 countsByYear W27601892552019 @default.
- W2760189255 countsByYear W27601892552020 @default.
- W2760189255 countsByYear W27601892552021 @default.
- W2760189255 countsByYear W27601892552023 @default.
- W2760189255 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2760189255 hasAuthorship W2760189255A5012261973 @default.