Ecological Factors Affecting Community Invasibility
نویسندگان
چکیده
What makes a community invasible? For over a century ecologists have sought to understand the relative importance of biotic and abiotic factors that determine community composition. The fact that we are still exploring this topic today hints at both its importance and complexity. As the impacts from harmful non-native species accumulate, it has become increasingly urgent to find answers to the more applied aspects of this question: what makes a habitat vulnerable to invasion by additional species, and which species are likely to invade? Answers to these questions will not only aid in targeting conservation efforts but will also advance our understanding of marine community ecology. Although the relative importance of abiotic vs. biotic factors in making a habitat invasible varies, abiotic factors undoubtedly serve as the first “filter” to invasions, limiting establishment of non-native (=exotic) species to conditions approximating their native ranges. As obvious examples, tropical corals will not establish in boreal waters, and temperate rocky intertidal species will not colonize tropical shores. Similarly, species cannot invade a community if propagules do not arrive at the site. Other chapters in this volume cover the influence of abiotic factors and propagule supply (Chap. 7, Johnston et al.; Chap. 8, Miller and Ruiz; Chap. 19, Hewitt et al.), so we only briefly review these factors. In this chapter we focus on the question of predicting invasion success of non-native species that are (1) transported to the habitat in question (i.e., propagule supply is not extremely limiting) and (2) physiologically capable of surviving in the climatic regime. We begin with the observation that even in areas of suitable habitat within the current range of an introduced species, there is often dramatic variation in the density, presence, and overall success of the invader. We seek to explain this variation in terms of processes that control the availability of resources. These include not only abiotic and physical factors that determine base resource levels, but also interactions between species or between organisms and their environment that increase resource availability (through disturbance) or decrease resource availability (through competitive processes), or create new resources (through facilitation) (Fig. 12.1).
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