Competitive exclusion from native plants and co-occurring exotic plants
was the most important factor influencing plant invasion in freshwater
ecosystems
- shufeng fan,
- Haihao Yu,
- Tian Lv,
- Lei Yang,
- Yang Li,
- Ligong Wang,
- Chunhua Liu,
- Dan Yu
Abstract
Few studies have evaluated the relative importance of various factors in
the invasion process of exotic plants in freshwater ecosystems due to
the difficulty of observing numerous factors simultaneously. In this
study, to explore how various biotic and abiotic factors determine the
overall invasion extent of all exotic plants and the invasion extent of
different life-form exotic plants as well as assess their relative
importance, we surveyed 236 exotic aquatic plant communities using 2267
fine quadrats in China's freshwater ecosystems. We found that
competition from native plants was the most vital factor determining the
mean biomass of all exotic plants and biomass of submerged plant Cabomba
caroliniana, while competition from co-occurring exotics was the most
important for biomass of emergent plant Alternanthera philoxeroides and
free-floating plant Eichhornia crassipes. The population biomass of
different exotic species responded differently to climate change. Water
eutrophication could accelerate the invasion of exotic plants by
directly favoring them and indirectly weakening the resistance of native
plants. Water depth, habitat size, herbivory, and anthropogenic
disturbance had relatively weak impacts on the biomass of exotic plants.
Moreover, some factors have different modes of influence on different
exotic plants. Our study suggested interspecific competition plays a
more important role in the population spread of exotic plants than
climate and abiotic environment once the plants have successfully
established, implying that biodiversity conservation and vegetation
restoration were the fundamental methods to control invasion. In
addition, our study highlights the importance of studying the overall
invasion extent of all exotic plants and interactions among invaders in
multi-invader communities.12 Jul 2023Submitted to Ecography 13 Jul 2023Submission Checks Completed
13 Jul 2023Assigned to Editor
13 Jul 2023Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
17 Aug 2023Reviewer(s) Assigned