Mammalian Browsers Disrupt Eco‐Evolutionary Dynamics in a Forest Tree Restoration Planting

ABSTRACT Native and restored forests are increasingly impacted by pests and diseases, including large herbivores. While community‐ and species‐level impacts of these tree enemies are often well‐documented, there is little understanding of their influence on finer‐scale eco‐evolutionary processes. We...

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Main Authors: João Costa e Silva, Brad M. Potts, Peter A. Harrison
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-05-01
Series:Evolutionary Applications
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.70099
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author João Costa e Silva
Brad M. Potts
Peter A. Harrison
author_facet João Costa e Silva
Brad M. Potts
Peter A. Harrison
author_sort João Costa e Silva
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT Native and restored forests are increasingly impacted by pests and diseases, including large herbivores. While community‐ and species‐level impacts of these tree enemies are often well‐documented, there is little understanding of their influence on finer‐scale eco‐evolutionary processes. We here study the influence of large‐mammal herbivory on the survival and height growth of trees in a mixed species restoration planting of the Australian forest trees, Eucalyptus ovata and E. pauciflora, in Tasmania, Australia. Common‐garden field trials mixing the two species were compared in adjacent unbrowsed (fenced) and browsed (unfenced) plantings. The browsed planting was exposed to mammal browsing by native marsupials, as well as feral introduced European fallow deer (Dama dama). Each tree species was represented by open‐pollinated families from 22 paired geographic areas, allowing the assessment of the effects of browsing on the species and population differences, as well as on family variation within each species. In the browsed planting, a marked reduction in species and population differences, as well as in family variance, was observed for both height growth and survival. The pattern of height growth and survival of the populations of both species also differed between browsing regimes, with significant changes of climate relationships involving both focal tree attributes detected. Our results argue for a major disruption of the eco‐evolutionary dynamics of restored forests in the presence of browsing by large mammalian herbivores, at the observed period of the tree life cycle. Importantly for forest restoration and conservation in the face of global change, our results challenge the choice of tree populations for translocation based solely on predicted or observed relationships of their home‐site climate with current and predicted future climates of the restoration sites, while emphasising the need for genetic diversity to provide future resilience of restored forests to both biotic and abiotic stresses.
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spelling doaj-art-1b7fcb3dfd4b4533a9330960fb8045e12025-08-20T03:48:22ZengWileyEvolutionary Applications1752-45712025-05-01185n/an/a10.1111/eva.70099Mammalian Browsers Disrupt Eco‐Evolutionary Dynamics in a Forest Tree Restoration PlantingJoão Costa e Silva0Brad M. Potts1Peter A. Harrison2Centro de Estudos Florestais, Instituto Superior de Agronomia Universidade de Lisboa Lisboa PortugalSchool of Natural Sciences University of Tasmania Hobart Tasmania AustraliaSchool of Natural Sciences University of Tasmania Hobart Tasmania AustraliaABSTRACT Native and restored forests are increasingly impacted by pests and diseases, including large herbivores. While community‐ and species‐level impacts of these tree enemies are often well‐documented, there is little understanding of their influence on finer‐scale eco‐evolutionary processes. We here study the influence of large‐mammal herbivory on the survival and height growth of trees in a mixed species restoration planting of the Australian forest trees, Eucalyptus ovata and E. pauciflora, in Tasmania, Australia. Common‐garden field trials mixing the two species were compared in adjacent unbrowsed (fenced) and browsed (unfenced) plantings. The browsed planting was exposed to mammal browsing by native marsupials, as well as feral introduced European fallow deer (Dama dama). Each tree species was represented by open‐pollinated families from 22 paired geographic areas, allowing the assessment of the effects of browsing on the species and population differences, as well as on family variation within each species. In the browsed planting, a marked reduction in species and population differences, as well as in family variance, was observed for both height growth and survival. The pattern of height growth and survival of the populations of both species also differed between browsing regimes, with significant changes of climate relationships involving both focal tree attributes detected. Our results argue for a major disruption of the eco‐evolutionary dynamics of restored forests in the presence of browsing by large mammalian herbivores, at the observed period of the tree life cycle. Importantly for forest restoration and conservation in the face of global change, our results challenge the choice of tree populations for translocation based solely on predicted or observed relationships of their home‐site climate with current and predicted future climates of the restoration sites, while emphasising the need for genetic diversity to provide future resilience of restored forests to both biotic and abiotic stresses.https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.70099assisted migrationclimate adaptation and modellingdifferentiation of tree species and provenancesfamily varianceherbivore‐plant interactionstree survival and height growth
spellingShingle João Costa e Silva
Brad M. Potts
Peter A. Harrison
Mammalian Browsers Disrupt Eco‐Evolutionary Dynamics in a Forest Tree Restoration Planting
Evolutionary Applications
assisted migration
climate adaptation and modelling
differentiation of tree species and provenances
family variance
herbivore‐plant interactions
tree survival and height growth
title Mammalian Browsers Disrupt Eco‐Evolutionary Dynamics in a Forest Tree Restoration Planting
title_full Mammalian Browsers Disrupt Eco‐Evolutionary Dynamics in a Forest Tree Restoration Planting
title_fullStr Mammalian Browsers Disrupt Eco‐Evolutionary Dynamics in a Forest Tree Restoration Planting
title_full_unstemmed Mammalian Browsers Disrupt Eco‐Evolutionary Dynamics in a Forest Tree Restoration Planting
title_short Mammalian Browsers Disrupt Eco‐Evolutionary Dynamics in a Forest Tree Restoration Planting
title_sort mammalian browsers disrupt eco evolutionary dynamics in a forest tree restoration planting
topic assisted migration
climate adaptation and modelling
differentiation of tree species and provenances
family variance
herbivore‐plant interactions
tree survival and height growth
url https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.70099
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AT bradmpotts mammalianbrowsersdisruptecoevolutionarydynamicsinaforesttreerestorationplanting
AT peteraharrison mammalianbrowsersdisruptecoevolutionarydynamicsinaforesttreerestorationplanting