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Non-native plants have greater impacts because of differing per-capita effects and non-linear abundance-impact curves

May 21, 2019

Invasive, non-native species can have tremendous impacts on biotic communities, where they reduce the abundance and diversity of local species. However, it remains unclear whether impacts of non-native species arise from their high abundance or whether each non-native individual has a disproportionate impact – i.e., a higher per-capita effect – on co-occurring species compared to impacts by native species. Using a long-term study of wetlands, we asked how temporal variation in dominant native and non-native plants impacted the abundance and richness of other plants in the recipient community. Non-native plants reached higher abundances than natives and had greater per-capita effects. The abundance-impact relationship between plant abundance and richness was nonlinear. Compared with increasing native abundance, increasing non-native abundance was associated with steeper declines in richness because of greater per-capita effects and nonlinearities in the abundance-impact relationship. Our study supports eco-evolutionary novelty of non-natives as a driver of their outsized impacts on communities.

Publication Year 2019
Title Non-native plants have greater impacts because of differing per-capita effects and non-linear abundance-impact curves
DOI 10.1111/ele.13284
Authors Ian Pearse, Helen Sofaer, David N. Zaya, Greg Spyreas
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Ecology Letters
Index ID 70204057
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Fort Collins Science Center