“…Introduced mammals reduce Hawaiian seedling recruitment directly through consumption of flowers, seeds, and seedlings (Pender, Shiels, Bialic‐Murphy, & Mosher, 2013; Shiels & Drake, 2011; Shiels, Pitt, Sugihara, & Witmer, 2014), as well as indirectly through disturbance to the plant‐growth substrate (Cole, Litton, Koontz, & Loh, 2012; Murphy, Inman‐Narahari, Ostertag, & Litton, 2014). Non‐native insects may similarly threaten seedling recruitment indirectly through damage to flowers or through failure to pollinate native plants (Aslan, Shiels, Haines, & Liang, 2019; Aslan, Zavaleta, Tershy, Croll, & Robichaux, 2014). Invasive slugs and snails also target native seedlings directly for consumption in Hawaiian forests (Joe & Daehler, 2008; Shiels, Ennis, & Shiels, 2014).…”