# Global Study of Plant‐Herbivore Interactions Reveals Similar Patterns of Herbivory Across Native and Non‐Native Plants

**Authors:** Andrea Galmán, Philip G. Hahn, Brian D. Inouye, Nora Underwood, Yanjie Liu, Susan R. Whitehead, William C. Wetzel

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/ele.70196 · Ecology Letters · 2025-08-14

## TL;DR

A global study found that native and non-native plants experience similar levels of herbivory, challenging the idea that non-native plants interact differently with herbivores.

## Contribution

The study introduces a novel approach by comparing within-population variability in herbivory, in addition to mean herbivory, across native and non-native plants.

## Key findings

- No overall differences in mean herbivory were found between native and non-native plants.
- Variability in herbivory was also similar between native and non-native plant populations.
- Non-native status does not strongly predict ecological roles in plant-herbivore interactions.

## Abstract

A core hypothesis in invasion and community ecology is that species interaction patterns should differ between native and non‐native species due to non‐native species lacking a long evolutionary history in their resident communities. Numerous studies testing this hypothesis yield conflicting results, often focusing on mean interaction rates and overlooking the substantial within‐population variability in species interactions. We explored plant‐herbivore interactions in populations of native and established non‐native plant species by quantifying differences in mean herbivory and added a novel approach by comparing within‐population variability in herbivory. We include as covariates latitude, plant richness, plant growth form and cover. Using leaf herbivory data from the Herbivory Variability Network for 788 plant populations spanning 504 species globally distributed, we found no overall differences in mean herbivory or variability between native and non‐native plants. These results suggest native and established non‐native plants interact similarly with herbivores, indicating non‐native status is not a strong predictor of ecological roles.

We conducted a global comparison of herbivory between native and non‐native species, using data from 788 populations of 504 plant species. After accounting for differences in introduction status, time since introduction, and several ecological factors, we found no differences in mean herbivory or variability in herbivory between native and non‐native plants.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

78 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12352374/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12352374