AI Article Synopsis

  • The success of species invasions is influenced by various factors like propagule pressure, disturbance, and traits of both native and non-native species.
  • The study uses a mechanistic model to simulate plant introductions on an oceanic island, allowing for the control of environmental conditions and monitoring species traits.
  • Findings indicate that higher propagule pressure and certain functional traits, such as environmental adaptability and increased dispersal, significantly enhance invasion success, underscoring the need to manage and reduce the introduction of similar alien species.

Article Abstract

The success of species invasions depends on multiple factors, including propagule pressure, disturbance, productivity, and the traits of native and non-native species. While the importance of many of these determinants has already been investigated in relative isolation, they are rarely studied in combination. Here, we address this shortcoming by exploring the effect of the above-listed factors on the success of invasions using an individual-based mechanistic model. This approach enables us to explicitly control environmental factors (temperature as surrogate for productivity, disturbance, and propagule pressure) as well as to monitor whole-community trait distributions of environmental adaptation, mass, and dispersal abilities. We simulated introductions of plant individuals to an oceanic island to assess which factors and species traits contribute to invasion success. We found that the most influential factors were higher propagule pressure and a particular set of traits. This invasion trait syndrome was characterized by a relative similarity in functional traits of invasive to native species, while invasive species had on average higher environmental adaptation, higher body mass, and increased dispersal distances, that is, had greater competitive and dispersive abilities. Our results highlight the importance in management practice of reducing the import of alien species, especially those that display this trait syndrome and come from similar habitats as those being managed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8668767PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8348DOI Listing

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