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@article{1306251, author = {Pyšek, Petr and Manceur, Ameur and Alba, Christina and McGregor, Kirsty and Pergl, Jan and Štajerová, Kateřina and Chytrý, Milan and Danihelka, Jiří and Kartesz, John and Klimešová, Jitka and Lučanová, Magdalena and Moravcová, Lenka and Nishino, Misako and Sádlo, Jiří and Suda, Jan and Tichý, Lubomír and Kühn, Ingolf}, article_number = {3}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/14-1005.1}, keywords = {biological traits; cultivation; exotic species; native range; path analysis; plant invasion; propagule pressure; residence time}, language = {eng}, issn = {0012-9658}, journal = {Ecology}, title = {Naturalization of central European plants in North America: species traits, habitats, propagule pressure, residence time}, url = {http://www.esajournals.org/doi/abs/10.1890/14-1005.1}, volume = {96}, year = {2015} }
TY - JOUR ID - 1306251 AU - Pyšek, Petr - Manceur, Ameur - Alba, Christina - McGregor, Kirsty - Pergl, Jan - Štajerová, Kateřina - Chytrý, Milan - Danihelka, Jiří - Kartesz, John - Klimešová, Jitka - Lučanová, Magdalena - Moravcová, Lenka - Nishino, Misako - Sádlo, Jiří - Suda, Jan - Tichý, Lubomír - Kühn, Ingolf PY - 2015 TI - Naturalization of central European plants in North America: species traits, habitats, propagule pressure, residence time JF - Ecology VL - 96 IS - 3 SP - 762-774 EP - 762-774 PB - Ecological Society of America SN - 00129658 KW - biological traits KW - cultivation KW - exotic species KW - native range KW - path analysis KW - plant invasion KW - propagule pressure KW - residence time UR - http://www.esajournals.org/doi/abs/10.1890/14-1005.1 N2 - The factors that promote invasive behavior in introduced plant species occur across many scales of biological and ecological organization. Factors that act at relatively small scales, for example, the evolution of biological traits associated with invasiveness, scale up to shape species distributions among different climates and habitats, as well as other characteristics linked to invasion, such as attractiveness for cultivation (and by extension propagule pressure). To identify drivers of invasion it is therefore necessary to disentangle the contribution of multiple factors that are interdependent. To this end, we formulated a conceptual model describing the process of invasion of central European species into North America based on a sequence of ‘‘drivers.’’ We then used confirmatory path analysis to test whether the conceptual model is supported by a statistical model inferred from a comprehensive database containing 466 species. The path analysis revealed that naturalization of central European plants in North America, in terms of the number of North American regions invaded, most strongly depends on residence time in the invaded range and the number of habitats occupied by species in their native range. In addition to the confirmatory path analysis, we identified the effects of various biological traits on several important drivers of the conceptualized invasion process. The data supported a model that included indirect effects of biological traits on invasion via their effect on the number of native range habitats occupied and cultivation in the native range. For example, persistent seed banks and longer flowering periods are positively correlated with number of native habitats, while a stress-tolerant life strategy is negatively correlated with native range cultivation. However, the importance of the biological traits is nearly an order of magnitude less than that of the larger scale drivers and highly dependent on the invasion stage (traits were associated only with native range drivers). This suggests that future research should explicitly link biological traits to the different stages of invasion, and that a failure to consider residence time or characteristics of the native range may seriously overestimate the role of biological traits, which, in turn, may result in spurious predictions of plant invasiveness. ER -
PYŠEK, Petr, Ameur MANCEUR, Christina ALBA, Kirsty MCGREGOR, Jan PERGL, Kateřina ŠTAJEROVÁ, Milan CHYTRÝ, Jiří DANIHELKA, John KARTESZ, Jitka KLIMEŠOVÁ, Magdalena LUČANOVÁ, Lenka MORAVCOVÁ, Misako NISHINO, Jiří SÁDLO, Jan SUDA, Lubomír TICHÝ and Ingolf KÜHN. Naturalization of central European plants in North America: species traits, habitats, propagule pressure, residence time. \textit{Ecology}. Ecological Society of America, 2015, vol.~96, No~3, p.~762-774. ISSN~0012-9658. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.1890/14-1005.1.
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