4.8 Article

Species pools, community completeness and invasion: disentangling diversity effects on the establishment of native and alien species

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 19, Issue 12, Pages 1496-1505

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.12702

Keywords

Alpha diversity; biotic resistance; competition; dark diversity; disturbance; exotic species; gamma diversity; invasibility; regional processes; structural equation modelling

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Funding

  1. Estonian Research Council [PUTJD15]
  2. Estonian Ministry of Education and Research institutional research funding [IUT20-29]
  3. European Regional Development Fund (Centre of Excellence EcolChange)

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Invasion should decline with species richness, yet the relationship is inconsistent. Species richness, however, is a product of species pool size and biotic filtering. Invasion may increase with richness if large species pools represent weaker environmental filters. Measuring species pool size and the proportion realised locally (completeness) may clarify diversity-invasion relationships by separating environmental and biotic effects, especially if species' life-history stage and origin are accounted for. To test these relationships, we added seeds and transplants of 15 native and alien species into 29 grasslands. Species pool size and completeness explained more variation in invasion than richness alone. Although results varied between native and alien species, seed establishment and biotic resistance to transplants increased with species pool size, whereas transplant growth and biotic resistance to seeds increased with completeness. Consequently, species pools and completeness represent multiple independent processes affecting invasion; accounting for these processes improves our understanding of invasion.

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