What Is a Specialist? Quantifying Host Breadth Enables Impact Prediction for Invasive Herbivores

IF 7.6 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY
Ecology Letters Pub Date : 2025-02-19 DOI:10.1111/ele.70083
Ashley N. Schulz, Nathan P. Havill, Travis D. Marsico, Matthew P. Ayres, Kamal J.K. Gandhi, Daniel A. Herms, Angela M. Hoover, Ruth A. Hufbauer, Andrew M. Liebhold, Kenneth F. Raffa, Kathryn A. Thomas, Patrick C. Tobin, Daniel R. Uden, Angela M. Mech
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Herbivores are commonly classified as host specialists or generalists for various purposes, yet the definitions of these terms, and their intermediates, are often imprecise and ambiguous. We quantified host breadth for 240 non-native, tree-feeding insects in North America using phylogenetic diversity. We demonstrated that a partitioning of host breadth: (1) causes 67% of non-native insects to shift from a generalist to specialist category, (2) displays a reduction in host breadth from the native to introduced range, (3) identifies an inflection point in a model predicting the likelihood of non-native insect ecological impact, with a corresponding change in behaviour associated with specialists versus generalists, and (4) enables three models for strong prediction of whether a non-native forest insect will cause high impacts. Together, these results highlight the primacy of how herbivore host recognition and plant defences mediate whether novel host interactions will result in high impact after invasion.

Abstract Image

什么是专家?量化宿主宽度可以预测入侵食草动物的影响
草食动物通常被分类为寄主专家或通才,但这些术语的定义,以及它们的中间物,往往是不精确和模糊的。利用系统发育多样性对240种北美非本地树食性昆虫的寄主宽度进行了量化。我们证明了主机宽度的划分:(1)导致67%的非本地昆虫从通才类转变为专才类;(2)显示宿主宽度从本地范围到引进范围的减少;(3)在预测非本地昆虫生态影响可能性的模型中确定一个拐点,以及与专才和通才相关的行为的相应变化;(4)使三个模型能够强有力地预测非本地森林昆虫是否会造成高影响。总之,这些结果强调了草食宿主识别和植物防御如何调节新宿主相互作用是否会在入侵后产生高影响。
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来源期刊
Ecology Letters
Ecology Letters 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
17.60
自引率
3.40%
发文量
201
审稿时长
1.8 months
期刊介绍: Ecology Letters serves as a platform for the rapid publication of innovative research in ecology. It considers manuscripts across all taxa, biomes, and geographic regions, prioritizing papers that investigate clearly stated hypotheses. The journal publishes concise papers of high originality and general interest, contributing to new developments in ecology. Purely descriptive papers and those that only confirm or extend previous results are discouraged.
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