Contrasting patterns in phylogenetic and biogeographic factories of invasive grasses (Poaceae) across the globe.

NPJ Biodivers

BIOMA Lab, Departamento de Biología, Geología, Química y Física Inorgánica, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Móstoles, Spain.

Published: May 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Grasses (Poaceae) are highly invasive worldwide, with about 19% classified as invasive and nearly 38% as naturalized, indicating significant invasion success across many tribes.
  • The likelihood of a grass species becoming invasive is linked to its evolutionary traits and diversification rates, suggesting that some ancestral characteristics may predispose them to success in new environments.
  • Different biogeographic regions show varying levels of invasive grasses, with the temperate Palearctic having the highest ratio of invasives, highlighting the need for targeted management strategies based on evolutionary patterns.

Article Abstract

Grasses (Family Poaceae) are among the most successful invasive plants in the world. Here we evaluate phylogenetic and biogeographic patterns of emergence of naturalized and invasive species among grasses globally. In our data, circa 19% of the grasses are currently catalogued as invasive and almost 38% are listed as naturalized; these are among the highest ratios for single families of organisms. Remarkably, most tribes of grasses contain numerous naturalized and invasive species, suggesting that the invasion success is rooted broadly in ancestral traits in the Poaceae. Moreover, the probability of invasiveness is positively related to the diversification rates in the family also suggesting a link with recent radiation events. The phylogenetic distribution of the invasive condition is neither strongly conserved nor purely random. Phylogenetic clumping levels also vary between Poaceae subclades. We postulate that this diffuse clumping could be partially attributed to the expression of labile traits that contribute to species invasiveness. In addition, floristic regions (biomes and biogeographic realms) have different proportions of invasive species, with the temperate Palearctic region having the highest ratio of invasive vs. non-invasive species. The phylodiversity of aliens across regions is also variable in space. Comparison of alien phylodiversity levels across biogeographic realms and biomes reveals regions producing highly restricted invasive lineages and others where the diversity of aliens exported is no different from global mean diversity levels in grasses. Elucidating the evolutionary patterns and drivers of invasiveness is useful for understanding and managing invasions, with the low phylogenetic structure of alien grasses warning of their overall high invasiveness potential.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11332090PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s44185-023-00016-4DOI Listing

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