| Literature DB >> 34050023 |
Trevor S Fristoe1, Milan Chytrý2, Wayne Dawson3, Franz Essl4, Ruben Heleno5, Holger Kreft6,7, Noëlie Maurel8, Jan Pergl9, Petr Pyšek9,10, Hanno Seebens11, Patrick Weigelt6, Pablo Vargas12, Qiang Yang8, Fabio Attorre13, Erwin Bergmeier14, Markus Bernhardt-Römermann15, Idoia Biurrun16, Steffen Boch17, Gianmaria Bonari18, Zoltán Botta-Dukát19, Hans Henrik Bruun20, Chaeho Byun21, Andraž Čarni22,23, Maria Laura Carranza24, Jane A Catford25, Bruno E L Cerabolini26, Eduardo Chacón-Madrigal27, Daniela Ciccarelli28, Renata Ćušterevska29, Iris de Ronde30, Jürgen Dengler31,32,33, Valentin Golub34, Rense Haveman30, Nate Hough-Snee35, Ute Jandt33,36, Florian Jansen37, Anna Kuzemko38, Filip Küzmič39, Jonathan Lenoir40, Armin Macanović41, Corrado Marcenò2, Adam R Martin42, Sean T Michaletz43, Akira S Mori44, Ülo Niinemets45, Tomáš Peterka2, Remigiusz Pielech46,47, Valerijus Rašomavičius48, Solvita Rūsiņa49, Arildo S Dias50, Mária Šibíková51, Urban Šilc22, Angela Stanisci52, Steven Jansen53, Jens-Christian Svenning54, Grzegorz Swacha55, Fons van der Plas56, Kiril Vassilev57, Mark van Kleunen8,58.
Abstract
Understanding drivers of success for alien species can inform on potential future invasions. Recent conceptual advances highlight that species may achieve invasiveness via performance along at least three distinct dimensions: 1) local abundance, 2) geographic range size, and 3) habitat breadth in naturalized distributions. Associations among these dimensions and the factors that determine success in each have yet to be assessed at large geographic scales. Here, we combine data from over one million vegetation plots covering the extent of Europe and its habitat diversity with databases on species' distributions, traits, and historical origins to provide a comprehensive assessment of invasiveness dimensions for the European alien seed plant flora. Invasiveness dimensions are linked in alien distributions, leading to a continuum from overall poor invaders to super invaders-abundant, widespread aliens that invade diverse habitats. This pattern echoes relationships among analogous dimensions measured for native European species. Success along invasiveness dimensions was associated with details of alien species' introduction histories: earlier introduction dates were positively associated with all three dimensions, and consistent with theory-based expectations, species originating from other continents, particularly acquisitive growth strategists, were among the most successful invaders in Europe. Despite general correlations among invasiveness dimensions, we identified habitats and traits associated with atypical patterns of success in only one or two dimensions-for example, the role of disturbed habitats in facilitating widespread specialists. We conclude that considering invasiveness within a multidimensional framework can provide insights into invasion processes while also informing general understanding of the dynamics of species distributions.Entities:
Keywords: distribution–abundance relationship; enemy release; forms of rarity; invasion success; leaf economic spectrum
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34050023 PMCID: PMC8179145 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2021173118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205