How invader traits interact with resident communities and resource availability to determine invasion success
نویسندگان
چکیده
Competition for limited resources is considered a key factor controlling invasion success. Resource availability can be viewed in either the long or short-term. Long-term availability depends on the baseline nutrient availability in the ecosystem and how those conditions shape the ecological community. Short-term resource availability fl uctuates with disturbances that alter nutrient availability and/or the density and composition of the ecological community. We investigated how species ’ traits interact with short and long-term resource availability to determine the outcome of invasions. We manipulated long-term baseline resource availability, disturbance intensity, disturbance frequency, and propagule pressure in a fully factorial design using protist microcosms. Our results show that short and long-term resource availability and the direct mortality from disturbance interact with the traits of resident community members and traits of invaders to determine community invasibility. While competitively dominant invaders with slow growth rates may suff er rather than benefi t from short-term resource fl uctuations, quickly growing but competitively inferior invaders can benefi t from both the resource fl uctuations and the heterogeneity in community composition created by disturbance. Our fi ndings empirically synthesize two explanations for invasion success, namely short-term resource fl uctuations and long-term resource availability, and highlight the importance of considering traits of invaders and residents, such as growth rate and competitive ability, in the context of productivity and disturbance gradients. Th is species ’ traits approach could resolve idiosyncratic results from natural systems undergoing disturbance and invasion that do not follow patterns predicted by traditional invasion frameworks.
منابع مشابه
Functional Richness and Identity Do Not Strongly Affect Invasibility of Constructed Dune Communities
Biotic effects are often used to explain community structure and invasion resistance. We evaluated the contribution of functional richness and identity to invasion resistance and abiotic resource availability using a mesocosm experiment. We predicted that higher functional richness would confer greater invasion resistance through greater resource sequestration. We also predicted that niche pre-...
متن کاملSpecies diversity, invasion success, and ecosystem functioning: disentangling the influence of resource competition, facilitation, and extrinsic factors
Experimental manipulations and observational surveys often produce conflicting conclusions regarding the effects of native species diversity on community susceptibility to invasion. Both provide useful pieces of information, but typically each asks fundamentally different questions. Surveys tell us that locations with species-rich native communities are characterized by conditions that promote ...
متن کاملMethods to test the interactive effects of drought and plant invasion on ecosystem structure and function using complementary common garden and field experiments
Abiotic global change drivers affect ecosystem structure and function, but how they interact with biotic factors such as invasive plants is understudied. Such interactions may be additive, synergistic, or offsetting, and difficult to predict. We present methods to test the individual and interactive effects of drought and plant invasion on native ecosystems. We coupled a factorial common garden...
متن کاملResource pulses can alleviate the biodiversity-invasion relationship in soil microbial communities.
The roles of species richness, resource use, and resource availability are central to many hypotheses explaining the diversity-invasion phenomenon but are generally not investigated together. Here, we created a large diversity gradient of soil microbial communities by either assembling communities of pure bacterial strains or removing the diversity of a natural soil. Using data on the resource-...
متن کاملPlant diversity increases resistance to invasion in the absence of covarying extrinsic factors
Biological invasion is a widespread, but poorly understood phenomenon. Elton’s hypothesis, supported by theory, experiment, and anecdotal evidence, suggests that an important determinant of invasion success is resident biodiversity, arguing that high diversity increases the competitive environment of communities and makes them more difficult to invade. Observational studies of plant invasions, ...
متن کامل