Труды сотрудников ИЛ им. В.Н. Сукачева СО РАН

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    Do alien plants escape from natural enemies of congeneric residents? Yes but not from all
/ N. . Kirichenko [et al.] // Biol. Invasions. - 2013. - Vol. 15, Is. 9. - P2105-2113, DOI 10.1007/s10530-013-0436-9. - Cited References: 47. - We thank the managers and botanists of Swiss and Russian arboreta for their cooperation and help, Diethart Matthies for statistical advice, Melanie Bateman and two anonymous reviewers for their comments on the manuscript. This work was supported by the European Union project PRATIQUE (No. 212459), the Swiss National scientific foundation (NSF) (No. IZKOZ3-128854), the Grant of the President of the Russian Federation (MR-7049.2010.4), the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (Grant No. 12-04-31250) and the Krasnoyarsk regional fund of supporting scientific and technological activities (Grant No. 05/12). . - 9. - ISSN 1387-3547
РУБ Biodiversity Conservation + Ecology

Аннотация: As predicted by the enemy release hypothesis, plants are supposedly less attacked by herbivores in their introduced range than in their native range. However, the nature of the natural enemies, in particular their degree of specificity may also affect the level of enemy escape. It is therefore expected that ectophagous invertebrate species, being generally considered as more generalists than endophagous species, are more prompt to colonise alien plants. In Swiss, Siberian and Russian Far East arboreta, we tested whether alien woody plants are less attacked by native herbivorous insects than native congeneric woody plant species. We also tested the hypothesis that leaf miners and gall makers show stronger preference for native woody plants than external leaf chewers. In all investigated regions, leaf miners and gall makers were more abundant and showed higher species richness on native woody plants than on congeneric alien plants. In contrast, external leaf chewers did not cause more damage to native plants than to alien plants, possibly because leaf chewers are, in general, less species specific than leaf miners and gall makers. These results, obtained over a very large number of plant-enemy systems, generally support the hypothesis that alien plants partly escape from phytophagous invertebrates but also show that different feeding guilds may react differently to the introduction of alien plants.

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Держатели документа:
[Kirichenko, Natalia
Baranchikov, Yuri] VN Sukachev Inst Forest SB RAS, Krasnoyarsk 660036, Russia
[Pere, Christelle
Schaffner, Urs
Kenis, Marc] CABI, CH-2800 Delemont, Switzerland
Институт леса им. В.Н. Сукачева Сибирского отделения Российской академии наук

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