Combining biogeographic approaches to advance invasion ecology and methodology
1) Understanding the causes of plant invasions requires that parallel field studies are conducted in the native and introduced ranges to elucidate how biogeographic shifts alter the individual performance, population success, and community-level impacts of invading plants. Three primary methods depl...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1) Understanding the causes of plant invasions requires that parallel
field studies are conducted in the native and introduced ranges to
elucidate how biogeographic shifts alter the individual performance,
population success, and community-level impacts of invading plants. Three
primary methods deployed in in situ biogeographic studies are directed
surveys, where researchers seek out populations of target species,
randomized surveys, and field experiments. Despite the importance of these
approaches for advancing biogeographic research, their relative merits
have not been evaluated. 2) We concurrently deployed directed surveys,
randomized surveys, and in situ field experiments for studying six
grassland plant species in the native and introduced ranges. Metrics
included plant size, fecundity, recruitment, abundance, and invader
impact, as well as soil properties and root associations with putative
fungal mutualists and pathogens. 3) Consistent with key invasion
hypotheses, Bromus tectorum experienced increased size and fecundity in
the introduced range linked to population increases and significant
invader impacts, along with altered fungal associations. However,
performance differences did not predict population increases and invader
impacts across species. Rather, the differential effect of disturbance in
facilitating greater recruitment in the introduced range appeared to play
a crucial, though previously underexplored, role in driving invader
success. 4) Directed surveys consistently generated information on plant
performance and fungal associations. However, soil sampling suggested that
directed surveys may have been biased toward disturbed conditions for half
the species. Randomized surveys generated robust data for population
comparisons and impact, but generally failed to produce performance
metrics for species that were uncommon or flowered outside the peak
sampling window. Field experiments controlled for bias and confounding
factors and provided rare information on recruitment and disturbance
effects, but scant recruitment in the native range and ethical constraints
on growing invaders in the introduced range limited information on
performance and plant-fungal interactions. 5) Synthesis. Each method had
strengths and weaknesses. However, when combined they provided
complementary information to paint the most complete biogeographic picture
to date for several introduced plants. We propose a hybrid approach to
optimize biogeographic studies. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.nvx0k6dvq |