Data from: Understorey plant community composition reflects invasion history decades after invasive Rhododendron has been removed
1) A growing awareness of the destructive effects of non-native invasive species has led to a massive increase in removal programmes around the world. Little is typically known about what happens to sites following the removal of the invasives, however, and the implicit assumption that the native co...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1) A growing awareness of the destructive effects of non-native invasive
species has led to a massive increase in removal programmes around the
world. Little is typically known about what happens to sites following the
removal of the invasives, however, and the implicit assumption that the
native community will return, unaided, to pre-invasion conditions is often
left untested. 2) We assessed recovery of the native understorey plant
community following removal of the non-native invasive Rhododendron
ponticum L. from Scottish Atlantic oak woodland. We recorded understorey
community composition in sites covering a gradient of increasing R.
ponticum density, and across a separate series of sites covering a
chronosequence of time since R. ponticum removal. We then compared both of
these series to the target community found in uninvaded sites. We also
analysed differences in soil chemistry between the sites to test for
chemical legacy effects of invasion in the soil. 3) Native understorey
cover declined as R. ponticum density increased, with bryophytes dropping
to less than a third of the cover present in uninvaded sites and forbs and
grasses being completely extirpated under dense stands. 4) Cleared sites
showed no evidence of returning to the target community even after 30
years of recovery, and instead formed a bryophyte-dominated ‘novel
community’, containing few of the typical oak woodland vascular plants. 5)
Contrary to expectation, soil pH, C:N ratio, and nutrient concentrations
(N, P, K, Ca and Mg) were not affected by the invasion of R. ponticum, and
chemical legacy effects in the soil were not responsible for the failure
of the native community to revert to pre-invasion conditions. Instead, we
hypothesise that the rapid formation of a bryophyte mat, coupled with the
often-substantial distances to potential seed sources, hindered vascular
plant recolonisation. 6) Synthesis and applications. Clear evidence of
invasion history can be detected in the understorey plant community even
decades after the successful removal of invasive R. ponticum. This finding
demonstrates that native communities may be unable to recover effectively
of their own accord following invasive species removal and will require
further management interventions in order to achieve restoration
goals.30-Jun-2017 |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.t4j7k |