Trait–environment relationships of plant species at different stages of the introduction process

The success of alien plant species can be attributed to differences in functional traits compared to less successful aliens as well as to native species, and thus their adaptation to environmental conditions. Studies have shown that alien (especially invasive) plant species differ fr...

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Main Authors: Marija Milanović, Sonja Knapp, Petr Pyšek, Ingolf Kühn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2020-07-01
Series:NeoBiota
Online Access:https://neobiota.pensoft.net/article/51655/download/pdf/
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spelling doaj-9db312bab0f64e9dbe80b52ca0a480a42020-11-25T03:55:51ZengPensoft PublishersNeoBiota1314-24882020-07-0158557410.3897/neobiota.58.5165551655Trait–environment relationships of plant species at different stages of the introduction processMarija Milanović0Sonja Knapp1Petr Pyšek2Ingolf Kühn3Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZHelmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZCharles UniversityGerman Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research The success of alien plant species can be attributed to differences in functional traits compared to less successful aliens as well as to native species, and thus their adaptation to environmental conditions. Studies have shown that alien (especially invasive) plant species differ from native species in traits such as specific leaf area (SLA), height, seed size or flowering period, where invasive species showed significantly higher values for these traits. Different environmental conditions, though, may promote the success of native or alien species, leading to competitive exclusion due to dissimilarity in traits between the groups. However, native and alien species can also be similar, with environmental conditions selecting for the same set of traits across species. So far, the effect of traits on invasion success has been studied without considering environmental conditions. To understand this interaction we examined the trait–environment relationship within natives, and two groups of alien plant species differing in times of introduction (archaeophytes vs. neophytes). Further, we investigated the difference between non-invasive and invasive neophytes. We analyzed the relationship between functional traits of 1,300 plant species occurring in 1000 randomly selected grid-cells across Germany and across different climatic conditions and land-cover types. Our results show that temperature, precipitation, the proportion of natural habitats, as well as the number of land-cover patches and geological patches affect archaeophytes and neophytes differently, regarding their level of urbanity (in neophytes negative for all non-urban land covers) and self-pollination (mainly positive for archaeophytes). Similar patterns were observed between non-invasive and invasive neophytes, where additionally, SLA, storage organs and the beginning of flowering were strongly related to several environmental factors. Native species did not express any strong relationship between traits and environment, possibly due to a high internal heterogeneity within this group of species. The relationship between trait and environment was more pronounced in neophytes compared to archaeophytes, and most pronounced in invasive plants. The alien species at different stages of the invasion process showed both similarities and differences in terms of the relationship between traits and the environment, showing that the success of introduced species is context-dependent. https://neobiota.pensoft.net/article/51655/download/pdf/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marija Milanović
Sonja Knapp
Petr Pyšek
Ingolf Kühn
spellingShingle Marija Milanović
Sonja Knapp
Petr Pyšek
Ingolf Kühn
Trait–environment relationships of plant species at different stages of the introduction process
NeoBiota
author_facet Marija Milanović
Sonja Knapp
Petr Pyšek
Ingolf Kühn
author_sort Marija Milanović
title Trait–environment relationships of plant species at different stages of the introduction process
title_short Trait–environment relationships of plant species at different stages of the introduction process
title_full Trait–environment relationships of plant species at different stages of the introduction process
title_fullStr Trait–environment relationships of plant species at different stages of the introduction process
title_full_unstemmed Trait–environment relationships of plant species at different stages of the introduction process
title_sort trait–environment relationships of plant species at different stages of the introduction process
publisher Pensoft Publishers
series NeoBiota
issn 1314-2488
publishDate 2020-07-01
description The success of alien plant species can be attributed to differences in functional traits compared to less successful aliens as well as to native species, and thus their adaptation to environmental conditions. Studies have shown that alien (especially invasive) plant species differ from native species in traits such as specific leaf area (SLA), height, seed size or flowering period, where invasive species showed significantly higher values for these traits. Different environmental conditions, though, may promote the success of native or alien species, leading to competitive exclusion due to dissimilarity in traits between the groups. However, native and alien species can also be similar, with environmental conditions selecting for the same set of traits across species. So far, the effect of traits on invasion success has been studied without considering environmental conditions. To understand this interaction we examined the trait–environment relationship within natives, and two groups of alien plant species differing in times of introduction (archaeophytes vs. neophytes). Further, we investigated the difference between non-invasive and invasive neophytes. We analyzed the relationship between functional traits of 1,300 plant species occurring in 1000 randomly selected grid-cells across Germany and across different climatic conditions and land-cover types. Our results show that temperature, precipitation, the proportion of natural habitats, as well as the number of land-cover patches and geological patches affect archaeophytes and neophytes differently, regarding their level of urbanity (in neophytes negative for all non-urban land covers) and self-pollination (mainly positive for archaeophytes). Similar patterns were observed between non-invasive and invasive neophytes, where additionally, SLA, storage organs and the beginning of flowering were strongly related to several environmental factors. Native species did not express any strong relationship between traits and environment, possibly due to a high internal heterogeneity within this group of species. The relationship between trait and environment was more pronounced in neophytes compared to archaeophytes, and most pronounced in invasive plants. The alien species at different stages of the invasion process showed both similarities and differences in terms of the relationship between traits and the environment, showing that the success of introduced species is context-dependent.
url https://neobiota.pensoft.net/article/51655/download/pdf/
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