Grassland invader responses to realistic changes in native species richness

被引:31
|
作者
Rinella, Matthew J.
Pokorny, Monica L.
Rekaya, Romdhane
机构
[1] USDA, Agr Res Serv, Livestock & Range Res Lab, Miles City, MT 59301 USA
[2] Montana State Univ, Dept Land Resources & Environm Sci, Bozeman, MT 59717 USA
[3] Univ Georgia, Rhodes Ctr Anim & Dairy Sci, Dept Dairy & Anim Sci, Athens, GA 30602 USA
关键词
Bayesian; biodiversity; Centaurea maculosa; forbs; grasses; invasibility; invasion resistance; local extinction; spotted knapweed;
D O I
10.1890/06-1881.1
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The importance of species richness for repelling exotic plant invasions varies from ecosystem to ecosystem. Thus, in order to prioritize conservation objectives, it is critical to identify those ecosystems where decreasing richness will most greatly magnify invasion risks. Our goal was to determine if invasion risks greatly increase in response to common reductions in grassland species richness. We imposed treatments that mimic management-induced reductions in grassland species richness (i.e., removal of shallow- and/or deep-rooted forbs and/or grasses and/or cryptogam layers). Then we introduced and monitored the performance of a notorious invasive species (i.e., Centaurea maculosa). We found that, on a per-gram-of-biomass basis, each resident plant group similarly suppressed invader growth. Hence, with respect to preventing C. maculosa invasions, maintaining overall productivity is probably more important than maintaining the productivity of particular plant groups or species. But at the sites we studied, all plant groups may be needed to maintain overall productivity because removing forbs decreased overall productivity in two of three years. Alternatively, removing forbs increased productivity in another year, and this led us to posit that removing forbs may inflate the temporal productivity variance as opposed to greatly affecting time-averaged productivity. In either case, overall productivity responses to single plant group removals were inconsistent and fairly modest, and only when all plant groups were removed did C. maculosa growth increase substantially over a no-removal treatment. As such, it seems that intense disturbances (e.g., prolonged drought, overgrazing) that deplete multiple plant groups may often be a prerequisite for C. maculosa invasion.
引用
收藏
页码:1824 / 1831
页数:8
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