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Predicting invasion in grassland ecosystems: is exotic dominance the real embarrassment of richness?

Authors :
Seabloom EW
Borer ET
Buckley Y
Cleland EE
Davies K
Firn J
Harpole WS
Hautier Y
Lind E
MacDougall A
Orrock JL
Prober SM
Adler P
Alberti J
Anderson TM
Bakker JD
Biederman LA
Blumenthal D
Brown CS
Brudvig LA
Caldeira M
Chu C
Crawley MJ
Daleo P
Damschen EI
D'Antonio CM
DeCrappeo NM
Dickman CR
Du G
Fay PA
Frater P
Gruner DS
Hagenah N
Hector A
Helm A
Hillebrand H
Hofmockel KS
Humphries HC
Iribarne O
Jin VL
Kay A
Kirkman KP
Klein JA
Knops JM
La Pierre KJ
Ladwig LM
Lambrinos JG
Leakey AD
Li Q
Li W
McCulley R
Melbourne B
Mitchell CE
Moore JL
Morgan J
Mortensen B
O'Halloran LR
Pärtel M
Pascual J
Pyke DA
Risch AC
Salguero-Gómez R
Sankaran M
Schuetz M
Simonsen A
Smith M
Stevens C
Sullivan L
Wardle GM
Wolkovich EM
Wragg PD
Wright J
Yang L
Source :
Global change biology [Glob Chang Biol] 2013 Dec; Vol. 19 (12), pp. 3677-87. Date of Electronic Publication: 2013 Oct 16.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Invasions have increased the size of regional species pools, but are typically assumed to reduce native diversity. However, global-scale tests of this assumption have been elusive because of the focus on exotic species richness, rather than relative abundance. This is problematic because low invader richness can indicate invasion resistance by the native community or, alternatively, dominance by a single exotic species. Here, we used a globally replicated study to quantify relationships between exotic richness and abundance in grass-dominated ecosystems in 13 countries on six continents, ranging from salt marshes to alpine tundra. We tested effects of human land use, native community diversity, herbivore pressure, and nutrient limitation on exotic plant dominance. Despite its widespread use, exotic richness was a poor proxy for exotic dominance at low exotic richness, because sites that contained few exotic species ranged from relatively pristine (low exotic richness and cover) to almost completely exotic-dominated ones (low exotic richness but high exotic cover). Both exotic cover and richness were predicted by native plant diversity (native grass richness) and land use (distance to cultivation). Although climate was important for predicting both exotic cover and richness, climatic factors predicting cover (precipitation variability) differed from those predicting richness (maximum temperature and mean temperature in the wettest quarter). Herbivory and nutrient limitation did not predict exotic richness or cover. Exotic dominance was greatest in areas with low native grass richness at the site- or regional-scale. Although this could reflect native grass displacement, a lack of biotic resistance is a more likely explanation, given that grasses comprise the most aggressive invaders. These findings underscore the need to move beyond richness as a surrogate for the extent of invasion, because this metric confounds monodominance with invasion resistance. Monitoring species' relative abundance will more rapidly advance our understanding of invasions.<br /> (© 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1365-2486
Volume :
19
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Global change biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24038796
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.12370