4.5 Article

Alien plant invasion hotspots and invasion debt in European woodlands

Journal

JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE
Volume 32, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jvs.13014

Keywords

alien plants; biological invasions; Europe; European Vegetation Archive; exotic plants; forest; habitat type; invasibility; neophytes; non‐ native plants

Funding

  1. SoMoPro II program
  2. Canadian Natural Science and Engineering Research Council
  3. People Program (Marie Curie Action) of the Seventh Framework Program of the EU [291782]
  4. South-Moravian Region
  5. Czech Science Foundation [19-28491X, 19-28807X]
  6. Czech Academy of Sciences [RVO 67985939]
  7. VILLUM FONDEN [16549]
  8. Basque Government [IT936-16]
  9. Plan Propio of the UCLM [2020-GRIN-29214]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study found that the richness and abundance of alien plant species in European woodlands vary by region and habitat types, with maximum responses in invasion hotspots in northwestern and central Europe. As alien plants continue to expand, their richness and abundance in woodlands are likely to be driven by the shared effects of introduction and planting history, differences in invaded habitat types, and dispersal corridors.
Questions European woodlands harbor at least 386 alien plant species but the factors driving local invasions remain unknown. By using a large vegetation-plot database, we asked how local richness and abundance of alien species vary by regions, elevation, climate, soil properties, human disturbance, and habitat types. Location Western, central and southern Europe. Methods We linked consolidated data from the European Vegetation Archive (16,211 plots) to a habitat classification scheme, climate, soil properties and human disturbance variables. In addition, we used 250 km x 250 km regional grid cells to test whether local patterns differ among regions. We used generalized additive models (GAMs) and quantile GAMs to explore how relative alien species richness and the sum of alien species covers per plot relate to predictors. Random Forest analyses (RFs) were employed to assess the importance of individual predictors that were not multicollinear. Results Relative alien species richness and the sum of alien species covers varied across regions and habitat types, with effects being more pronounced at the maximum rather than average responses. Both response variables declined with increasing elevation and distance to the nearest road or railroad and increased with the amount of sealed soil. Maxima in fitted functions matched plots from regional invasion hotspots in northwestern and central Europe. RFs accounted for 39.6% and 20.9% of the total variation in relative alien species richness and the sum of alien species covers, respectively, with region and habitat being the most important variables. Conclusions The importance of maximum response quantiles and the prevalence of regional hotspots point to invasion debt in European woodlands. As alien plants expand further, their species richness and abundance in woodlands will be likely driven by the shared effects of the introduction and planting history, differences in the invaded habitat types, and dispersal corridors.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available