FRISTOE, Trevor S., Milan CHYTRÝ, Wayne DAWSON, Franz ESSL, Ruben HELENO, Holger KREFT, Noëlie MAUREL, Jan PERGL, Petr PYŠEK, Hanno SEEBENS, Patrick WEIGELT, Pablo VARGAS, Qiang YANG, Fabio ATTORRE, Erwin BERGMEIER, Markus BERNHARDT-RÖMERMANN, Idoia BIURRUN, Steffen BOCH, Gianmaria BONARI, Zoltán BOTTA-DUKÁT, Hans Henrik BRUUN, Chaeho BYUN, Andraž CARNI, Maria Laura CARRANZA, Jane A. CATFORD, Bruno E. L. CERABOLINI, Eduardo CHACÓN-MADRIGAL, Daniela CICCARELLI, Renata CUŠTEREVSKA, Iris DE RONDE, Jürgen DENGLER, Valentin GOLUB, Rense HAVEMAN, Nate HOUGH-SNEE, Ute JANDT, Florian JANSEN, Anna KUZEMKO, Filip KÜZMIC, Jonathan LENOIR, Armin MACANOVIC, Corrado MARCENO', Adam R. MARTIN, Sean T. MICHALETZ, Akira S. MORI, Ülo NIINEMETS, Tomáš PETERKA, Remigiusz PIELECH, Valerijus RAŠOMAVICIUS, Solvita RUSINA, Arildo S. DIAS, Mária SIBÍKOVÁ, Urban SILC, Angela STANISCI, Steven JANSEN, Jens-Christian SVENNING, Grzegorz SWACHA, Fons VAN DER PLAS, Kiril VASSILEV and Mark VAN KLEUNEN. Dimensions of invasiveness: Links between local abundance, geographic range size, and habitat breadth in Europe's alien and native floras. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. Washington, D.C.: National Academy of Sciences, 2021, vol. 118, No 22, p. "e2021173118", 11 pp. ISSN 0027-8424. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2021173118.
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Basic information
Original name Dimensions of invasiveness: Links between local abundance, geographic range size, and habitat breadth in Europe's alien and native floras
Authors FRISTOE, Trevor S., Milan CHYTRÝ (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution), Wayne DAWSON, Franz ESSL, Ruben HELENO, Holger KREFT, Noëlie MAUREL, Jan PERGL, Petr PYŠEK, Hanno SEEBENS, Patrick WEIGELT, Pablo VARGAS, Qiang YANG, Fabio ATTORRE, Erwin BERGMEIER, Markus BERNHARDT-RÖMERMANN, Idoia BIURRUN, Steffen BOCH, Gianmaria BONARI, Zoltán BOTTA-DUKÁT, Hans Henrik BRUUN, Chaeho BYUN, Andraž CARNI, Maria Laura CARRANZA, Jane A. CATFORD, Bruno E. L. CERABOLINI, Eduardo CHACÓN-MADRIGAL, Daniela CICCARELLI, Renata CUŠTEREVSKA, Iris DE RONDE, Jürgen DENGLER, Valentin GOLUB, Rense HAVEMAN, Nate HOUGH-SNEE, Ute JANDT, Florian JANSEN, Anna KUZEMKO, Filip KÜZMIC, Jonathan LENOIR, Armin MACANOVIC, Corrado MARCENO' (380 Italy, belonging to the institution), Adam R. MARTIN, Sean T. MICHALETZ, Akira S. MORI, Ülo NIINEMETS, Tomáš PETERKA (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution), Remigiusz PIELECH, Valerijus RAŠOMAVICIUS, Solvita RUSINA, Arildo S. DIAS, Mária SIBÍKOVÁ, Urban SILC, Angela STANISCI, Steven JANSEN, Jens-Christian SVENNING, Grzegorz SWACHA, Fons VAN DER PLAS, Kiril VASSILEV and Mark VAN KLEUNEN.
Edition Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Washington, D.C. National Academy of Sciences, 2021, 0027-8424.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Field of Study 10700 1.7 Other natural sciences
Country of publisher United States of America
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
Impact factor Impact factor: 12.779
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14310/21:00119070
Organization unit Faculty of Science
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2021173118
UT WoS 000659433500011
Keywords in English invasion success; forms of rarity; distribution-abundance relationship; enemy release; leaf economic spectrum
Tags rivok
Tags International impact, Reviewed
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Marie Šípková, DiS., učo 437722. Changed: 18/1/2022 14:54.
Abstract
Understanding drivers of success for alien species can inform on potential future invasions. Recent conceptual advances highlight that species may achieve invasiveness via performance along at least three distinct dimensions: 1) local abundance, 2) geographic range size, and 3) habitat breadth in naturalized distributions. Associations among these dimensions and the factors that determine success in each have yet to be assessed at large geographic scales. Here, we combine data from over one million vegetation plots covering the extent of Europe and its habitat diversity with databases on species' distributions, traits, and historical origins to provide a comprehensive assessment of invasiveness dimensions for the European alien seed plant flora. Invasiveness dimensions are linked in alien distributions, leading to a continuum from overall poor invaders to super invaders-abundant, widespread aliens that invade diverse habitats. This pattern echoes relationships among analogous dimensions measured for native European species. Success along invasiveness dimensions was associated with details of alien species' introduction histories: earlier introduction dates were positively associated with all three dimensions, and consistent with theory-based expectations, species originating from other continents, particularly acquisitive growth strategists, were among the most successful invaders in Europe. Despite general correlations among invasiveness dimensions, we identified habitats and traits associated with atypical patterns of success in only one or two dimensions-for example, the role of disturbed habitats in facilitating widespread specialists. We conclude that considering invasiveness within a multidimensional framework can provide insights into invasion processes while also informing general understanding of
Links
GX19-28491X, research and development projectName: Centrum pro evropské vegetační syntézy (CEVS) (Acronym: CEVS)
Investor: Czech Science Foundation
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