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Abundance of introduced species at home predicts abundance away in herbaceous communities

Authors :
Firn, Jennifer
Moore, Joslin L.
MacDougall, Andrew S.
Borer, Elizabeth T.
Seabloom, Eric W.
HilleRisLambers, Janneke
Harpole, W. Stanley
Cleland, Elsa E.
Brown, Cynthia S.
Knops, Johannes M. H.
Prober, Suzanne M.
Pyke, David A.
Farrell, Kelly A.
Bakker, John D.
O’Halloran, Lydia R.
Adler, Peter B.
Collins, Scott L.
D’Antonio, Carla M.
Crawley, Michael J.
Wolkovich, Elizabeth M.
La Pierre, Kimberly J.
Melbourne, Brett A.
Hautier, Yann
Morgan, John W.
Leakey, Andrew D. B.
Kay, Adam
McCulley, Rebecca
Davies, Kendi F.
Stevens, Carly J.
Chu, Cheng-Jin
Holl, Karen D.
Klein, Julia A.
Fay, Philip A.
Hagenah, Nicole
Kirkman, Kevin P.
Buckley, Yvonne M.
Firn, Jennifer
Moore, Joslin L.
MacDougall, Andrew S.
Borer, Elizabeth T.
Seabloom, Eric W.
HilleRisLambers, Janneke
Harpole, W. Stanley
Cleland, Elsa E.
Brown, Cynthia S.
Knops, Johannes M. H.
Prober, Suzanne M.
Pyke, David A.
Farrell, Kelly A.
Bakker, John D.
O’Halloran, Lydia R.
Adler, Peter B.
Collins, Scott L.
D’Antonio, Carla M.
Crawley, Michael J.
Wolkovich, Elizabeth M.
La Pierre, Kimberly J.
Melbourne, Brett A.
Hautier, Yann
Morgan, John W.
Leakey, Andrew D. B.
Kay, Adam
McCulley, Rebecca
Davies, Kendi F.
Stevens, Carly J.
Chu, Cheng-Jin
Holl, Karen D.
Klein, Julia A.
Fay, Philip A.
Hagenah, Nicole
Kirkman, Kevin P.
Buckley, Yvonne M.

Abstract

Many ecosystems worldwide are dominated by introduced plant species, leading to loss of biodiversity and ecosystem function. A common but rarely tested assumption is that these plants are more abundant in introduced vs. native communities, because ecological or evolutionary-based shifts in populations underlie invasion success. Here, data for 26 herbaceous species at 39 sites, within eight countries, revealed that species abundances were similar at native (home) and introduced (away) sites – grass species were generally abundant home and away, while forbs were low in abundance, but more abundant at home. Sites with six or more of these species had similar community abundance hierarchies, suggesting that suites of introduced species are assembling similarly on different continents. Overall, we found that substantial changes to populations are not necessarily a pre-condition for invasion success and that increases in species abundance are unusual. Instead, abundance at home predicts abundance away, a potentially useful additional criterion for biosecurity programmes.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/msword, application/pdf, http://oro.open.ac.uk/28872/2/E495CD00.pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1291896050
Document Type :
Electronic Resource