2011
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0017227
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Herbivore Preference for Native vs. Exotic Plants: Generalist Herbivores from Multiple Continents Prefer Exotic Plants That Are Evolutionarily Naïve

Abstract: Enemy release and biotic resistance are competing, but not mutually exclusive, hypotheses addressing the success or failure of non-native plants entering a new region. Enemy release predicts that exotic plants become invasive by escaping their co-adapted herbivores and by being unrecognized or unpalatable to native herbivores that have not been selected to consume them. In contrast, biotic resistance predicts that native generalist herbivores will suppress exotic plants that will not have been selected to dete… Show more

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Cited by 132 publications
(110 citation statements)
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“…This will depend strongly on herbivore feeding preferences for certain plant species. There is contrasting evidence: native herbivores preferred exotic aquatic plant species in several studies (Parker & Hay, 2005;Morrison & Hay, 2011), but preferred native plants in other studies (Xiong et al, 2008). We hypothesised that the preference of native herbivores for certain plant species is related to the plant quality.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…This will depend strongly on herbivore feeding preferences for certain plant species. There is contrasting evidence: native herbivores preferred exotic aquatic plant species in several studies (Parker & Hay, 2005;Morrison & Hay, 2011), but preferred native plants in other studies (Xiong et al, 2008). We hypothesised that the preference of native herbivores for certain plant species is related to the plant quality.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Island and to exotic plants from Europe, the Americas, Australia, and Asia. Rabbits could only have had overlapping native ranges with exotic species from Europe, and herbivores often prefer naïve food (Morrison and Hay 2011). This suggests that grouping plant species by continental origin (hereafter origin) may be a better predictor of outcomes of interaction with rabbits than grouping by native status, because exotic plants not native to Europe should be as naïve to rabbits as are native plants.…”
Section: Study Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some empirical studies have found support for each of these hypotheses while others have been inconclusive, leading to a lack of generality and clarity (Colautti et al 2004;Hill and Kotanen 2009;Carrillo-Gavilán et al 2012;Fan et al 2013). For example, Morrison and Hay (2011) found that apple snails and crayfish prefer non-native plants to their more familiar native confamilials as predicted by the BRH while Tallamy and colleagues (2010) showed that exotic plants were detrimental to the growth of native generalist herbivores as predicted by the ERH. A meta-analysis by Chun et al (2010) found that exotic plants did not always experience enemy release and relatedness to native host species did not predict the behavior of native generalists.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%