What Is a Specialist? Quantifying Host Breadth Enables Impact Prediction for Invasive Herbivores
- PMID: 39967421
- DOI: 10.1111/ele.70083
What Is a Specialist? Quantifying Host Breadth Enables Impact Prediction for Invasive Herbivores
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.
Keywords: evolutionary history; generalists vs. specialists; herbivores; invasion risk assessment; phylogenetic diversity.
© 2025 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This article has been contributed to by U.S. Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA.
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Grants and funding
- 19-DG-11132544-022/USDA Forest Service National Urban and Community Forestry Advisory Council
- MISZ-069550/USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture McIntire-Stennis Cooperative Forestry Research Program
- G16AC00065/U.S. Geological Survey John Wesley Powell Center for Analysis and Synthesis
- ME022124/USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture Hatch Projects
- 1012868/USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture Hatch Projects
- 15-JV-11242303-103/USDA Forest Service Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment
- 1637685/National Science Foundation Long Term Ecological Research Network
- David R.M. Scott Endowed Professorship in Forest Resources
- U.S. Geological Survey Ecosystems Mission Area
- USDA Forest Service International Programs
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