Hidden Cargo: The Impact of Historical Shipping Trade on the Recent-Past and Contemporary Non-Native Flora of Northeastern United States

Understanding establishment and spread of non-native plants is important in the face of a homogenizing global flora. While many studies focus on successful, invasive species, fewer have studied failed plant introductions. Until the early 1900s, large quantities of ship ballast, often containing fore...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of botany 2023-09, Vol.110 (9), p.e16224
Hauptverfasser: Schmidt, Ryan J, King, Megan R, Aronson, Myla Fj, Struwe, Lena
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King, Megan R
Aronson, Myla Fj
Struwe, Lena
description Understanding establishment and spread of non-native plants is important in the face of a homogenizing global flora. While many studies focus on successful, invasive species, fewer have studied failed plant introductions. Until the early 1900s, large quantities of ship ballast, often containing foreign plant propagules, were deposited in New Jersey (USA) via shipping trade. The resulting ballast flora is documented in extensive herbarium records, providing us a unique opportunity to analyze successes and failures of novel plant species introductions. We used digitized specimens from 75 herbaria to study 264 non-native species introduced into New Jersey through 19th century ballast deposition. We used spatial (density-based clustering; HDBSCAN) and temporal analyses of species retention and geographic spread to quantify disappearance rate, survival, and dispersion through time and define trajectory groups. Four distinct trajectory groups were identified: Waif (only present during import; 32% of species), Short-Term (disappeared quickly; 20%), Established & Limited Spread (survives locally, 30%), and Established & Widespread (widespread, 18%). Species disappearance rate was highest during ballast deposition and decreased soon after deposition stopped around 1900. Spatial patterns show a strong association with 19th century railroads for inland dispersal from ports. The disappearance rate and spatial analyses are robust to herbarium collection bias. This is one of few studies documenting multi-species successes and failures in inadvertent plant introductions, using New Jersey as a model. Results reveal distinct trends in species establishment and geographic spread and highlight the utility of herbarium specimens in answering questions that span large time scales. KEY WORDS This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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While many studies focus on successful, invasive species, fewer have studied failed plant introductions. Until the early 1900s, large quantities of ship ballast, often containing foreign plant propagules, were deposited in New Jersey (USA) via shipping trade. The resulting ballast flora is documented in extensive herbarium records, providing us a unique opportunity to analyze successes and failures of novel plant species introductions. We used digitized specimens from 75 herbaria to study 264 non-native species introduced into New Jersey through 19th century ballast deposition. We used spatial (density-based clustering; HDBSCAN) and temporal analyses of species retention and geographic spread to quantify disappearance rate, survival, and dispersion through time and define trajectory groups. Four distinct trajectory groups were identified: Waif (only present during import; 32% of species), Short-Term (disappeared quickly; 20%), Established &amp; Limited Spread (survives locally, 30%), and Established &amp; Widespread (widespread, 18%). Species disappearance rate was highest during ballast deposition and decreased soon after deposition stopped around 1900. Spatial patterns show a strong association with 19th century railroads for inland dispersal from ports. The disappearance rate and spatial analyses are robust to herbarium collection bias. This is one of few studies documenting multi-species successes and failures in inadvertent plant introductions, using New Jersey as a model. Results reveal distinct trends in species establishment and geographic spread and highlight the utility of herbarium specimens in answering questions that span large time scales. KEY WORDS This article is protected by copyright. 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subjects 19th century
Ballast
Cargo ships
Clustering
Deposition
Dispersion
Flora
Indigenous plants
Indigenous species
Introduced species
Invasive species
New records
Plant introductions
Plant species introduction
Plants (botany)
Propagules
Spatial analysis
title Hidden Cargo: The Impact of Historical Shipping Trade on the Recent-Past and Contemporary Non-Native Flora of Northeastern United States
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