| Literature DB >> 25567917 |
Elizabeth A Leger1, Erin K Espeland2.
Abstract
Invasive species may establish in communities because they are better competitors than natives, but in order to remain community dominants, the competitive advantage of invasive species must be persistent. Native species that are not extirpated when highly invasive species are introduced are likely to compete with invaders. When population sizes and genetic diversity of native species are large enough, natives may be able to evolve traits that allow them to co-occur with invasive species. Native species may also evolve to become significant competitors with invasive species, and thus affect the fitness of invaders. Invasive species may respond in turn, creating either transient or continuing coevolution between competing species. In addition to demographic factors such as population size and growth rates, a number of factors including gene flow, genetic drift, the number of selection agents, encounter rates, and genetic diversity may affect the ability of native and invasive species to evolve competitive ability against one another. We discuss how these factors may differ between populations of native and invasive plants, and how this might affect their ability to respond to selection. Management actions that maintain genetic diversity in native species while reducing population sizes and genetic diversity in invasive species could promote the ability of natives to evolve improved competitive ability.Entities:
Keywords: coevolution; competition; contemporary evolution; invasive species; management; microevolution; restoration
Year: 2010 PMID: 25567917 PMCID: PMC3352482 DOI: 10.1111/j.1752-4571.2009.00105.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evol Appl ISSN: 1752-4571 Impact factor: 5.183
Figure 1Interactions between native species and invaders may lead to coevolution, as either a transient or escalating dynamic. This depends on the response of the native species to the initial interaction (A), which determines if the invasive species is likely to evolve in response to the native (B). The outcome of coevolution between native and invasive species may rely in part on the relative diversity between interacting native and invasive populations for traits that affect fitness in invaded systems (B). Dotted lines indicate possible result of long-term consistency in coevolutionary advantage. This assumes that demographic parameters will support these interactions but it is, of course, quite possible that the native species may become locally extirpated if populations become too small.
Examples of experimental questions and proposed methods that would address the potential for and contributing factors to coevolution between native and invasive plant species
| Experimental question | Method | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| A. Do strongly interacting remnant native and invasive species have similar levels of heritable variation for competitive traits? | Competition studies that include family structure or parent/offspring regressions in experimental design | Predict if coevolution can occur; predict long-term competitive outcomes |
| B. Can targeted management actions decrease heritable variation in competitive traits in invasive, but not native, species? | Apply management treatments and measure changes in heritable variation pre- and post-treatment in native and exotic species | Identify management actions most likely to favor native species in coevolutionary interactions |
| C. Does isolating patches of invasive species increase or decrease ability of invasive species to evolve in response to remnant natives? | Observational studies of heritable variation in isolated versus connected patches of invaders; or, long-term manipulative experiments with different patch sizes | Determine if management should focus on interrupting connectivity between patches |
| D. Do restoration materials collected from wild populations have greater genetic variation for competitive traits than agriculturally produced seeds? | Compare levels of heritable variation for competitive ability between wild- and agriculturally produced seed sources | Determine which restoration material is more likely to be able to evolve in response to invasive species |
Population genetic traits and ecological processes important for coevolution, and factors that may differ between remnant native and invasive species. The ‘+’ and ‘−’ indicates whether a factor is likely to positively or negatively affect the ability of the species to evolve to a competitor
| Trait/process | Remnant native species | Invasive species |
|---|---|---|
| A. Genetic diversity | Long residence time, high diversity (+) Seed bank increases diversity (+) Small populations (−) | Bottleneck, low diversity (−) Multiple introductions (+) Large populations (+) |
| B. Growth rate | Slow or negative population growth (−) | Populations rapidly expanding (+) |
| C. Gene flow | Gene flow from other populations can increase genetic diversity (+) Gene flow could swamp adaptive traits (−) | Less chance of gene flow from native range (−) Little chance of gene flow swamping adaptation (+) |
| D. Co-occurrence rate | Frequent encounters with invaders (+) | Low encounter rates with any single native species (−) |
| E. Number of selective agents | Low initially (+) Greater over time if invasion modifies habitat (−) | High initially (−) Less over time if invasion modifies habitat (+) |