Giant invasive Heracleum persicum: Friend or foe of plant diversity?
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/11831Date
2017-05-30Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
The impact of invasion
on diversity
varies widely and remains
elusive.
Despite
the con-
siderable
attempts
to understand
mechanisms
of biological
invasion,
it is largely un-
known
whether
some communities’
characteristics
promote
biological
invasion,
or
whether
some inherent
characteristics
of invaders
enable
them to invade other com-
munities.
Our aims were to assess the impact
of one of the massive
plant invaders
of
Scandinavia
on vascular
plant species
diversity,
disentangle
attributes
of invasible
and
noninvasible
communities,
and evaluate
the relationship
between
invasibility
and ge-
netic diversity
of a dominant
invader.
We studied
56 pairs of
Heracleum persicum
Desf.
ex Fisch.- invaded
and noninvaded
plots from 12 locations
in northern
Norway.
There
was lower native cover, evenness,
taxonomic
diversity,
native biomass,
and species
richness
in the invaded
plots than in the noninvaded
plots. The invaded
plots had
nearly two native species
fewer than the noninvaded
plots on average.
Within
the in-
vaded plots, cover of
H. persicum
had a strong negative
effect on the native cover,
evenness,
and native biomass,
and a positive
association
with the height of the native
plants. Plant communities
containing
only native species
appeared
more invasible
than
those that included
exotic species,
particularly
H. persicum
. Genetic
diversity
of
H. per
-
sicum
was positively
correlated
with invasibility
but not with community
diversity.
The
invasion
of a plant community
by
H. persicum
exerts consistent
negative
pressure
on
vascular
plant diversity.
The lack of positive
correlation
between
impacts
and genetic
diversity
of
H. persicum
indicates
that even a small founder
population
may cause high
impact.
We highlight
community
stability
or saturation
as an important
determinant
of
invasibility.
While the invasion
by
H. persicum
may decrease
susceptibility
of a plant
community
to further invasion,
it severely
reduces
the abundance
of native species
and
makes them more
vulnerable to competitive exclusion.
Description
Source at https://dx.doi.org/10.1002%2Fece3.3055