A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

In poor taste: leaf palatability traits are not correlated with aboveground enemy release




AuthorsXirocostas, Zoe A.; Slavich, Eve; Everingham, Susan E.; Salminen, Juha-Pekka; Booth, Louis; Gleadow, Roslyn; Ollerton, Jeff; Tamme, Riin; Peco, Begoña; Lesieur, Vincent; Raghu, S.; Junker, Robert R.; Pärtel, Meelis; Uesugi, Akane; Bonser, Stephen P.; Hovenden, Mark J.; Moles, Angela T.

PublisherSpringer Nature

Publication year2025

Journal: Oecologia

Article number17

Volume208

ISSN0029-8549

eISSN1432-1939

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-025-05853-7

Publication's open availability at the time of reportingNo Open Access

Publication channel's open availability Partially Open Access publication channel

Web address https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00442-025-05853-7


Abstract

Many species experience less pressure from herbivores, predators, or pathogens in their introduced range than in their native range. This phenomenon, known as enemy release, is one explanation for the success of introduced plant species worldwide. However, species experience enemy release to different extents, or not at all. Surprisingly, we have little understanding of what types of species or circumstances are associated with strong enemy release. We aimed to test whether ten defensive leaf traits that contribute to plants’ palatability to aboveground herbivores can predict the level of enemy release they experience. Our study expands upon previous work, which found enemy release occurring across 16 plant species studied at 12 sites within their native (5 sites; European) and introduced (7 sites; Australian) ranges. Contrary to all predictions, we found no evidence that enemy release was related to ash content, C:N ratio, hair density, leaf dry matter content, leaf mass per area, cyanogen presence, lipid content, phenolic compounds, oxidative activity, or combined chemical, physical, and total defences. This result demonstrates the need to further assess other traits, or environmental variables that may contribute to enemy release, so that we may more accurately predict when and where it is most likely to occur. Finding that these defensive traits do not predict enemy release in our study system brings us a step closer to understanding the mechanisms underlying successful invasion, which is increasingly important in our rapidly changing world.


Funding information in the publication
This work was supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program scholarship to ZAX, a Student Research Grant from the Evolution & Ecology Research Centre at UNSW Sydney to ZAX, a UNSW Science PhD Writing Scholarship to ZAX, an Ecological Society of Australia Student Award to ZAX, the Estonian Ministry of Education and Research (Centre of Excellence AgroCropFuture, TK200) and the Estonian Research Council (PRG1065, PRG2142) to MP and RT, and an Australian Research Council grant (DP190100243) to ATM, SR, JO, and SPB. JO thanks UNSW Sydney for funding of a Visiting Researcher Award in 2019. ZAX is currently supported by a Chancellor's Research Fellowship from the University of Technology Sydney.


Last updated on 31/12/2025 09:53:30 AM