Facilitation and competition among invasive plants: a field experiment with alligatorweed and water hyacinth.

Ecosystems that are heavily invaded by an exotic species often contain abundant populations of other invasive species. This may reflect shared responses to a common factor, but may also reflect positive interactions among these exotic species. Armand Bayou (Pasadena, TX) is one such ecosystem where...

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Main Authors: Emily J Wundrow, Juli Carrillo, Christopher A Gabler, Katherine C Horn, Evan Siemann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3484115?pdf=render
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author Emily J Wundrow
Juli Carrillo
Christopher A Gabler
Katherine C Horn
Evan Siemann
author_facet Emily J Wundrow
Juli Carrillo
Christopher A Gabler
Katherine C Horn
Evan Siemann
author_sort Emily J Wundrow
collection DOAJ
description Ecosystems that are heavily invaded by an exotic species often contain abundant populations of other invasive species. This may reflect shared responses to a common factor, but may also reflect positive interactions among these exotic species. Armand Bayou (Pasadena, TX) is one such ecosystem where multiple species of invasive aquatic plants are common. We used this system to investigate whether presence of one exotic species made subsequent invasions by other exotic species more likely, less likely, or if it had no effect. We performed an experiment in which we selectively removed exotic rooted and/or floating aquatic plant species and tracked subsequent colonization and growth of native and invasive species. This allowed us to quantify how presence or absence of one plant functional group influenced the likelihood of successful invasion by members of the other functional group. We found that presence of alligatorweed (rooted plant) decreased establishment of new water hyacinth (free-floating plant) patches but increased growth of hyacinth in established patches, with an overall net positive effect on success of water hyacinth. Water hyacinth presence had no effect on establishment of alligatorweed but decreased growth of existing alligatorweed patches, with an overall net negative effect on success of alligatorweed. Moreover, observational data showed positive correlations between hyacinth and alligatorweed with hyacinth, on average, more abundant. The negative effect of hyacinth on alligatorweed growth implies competition, not strong mutual facilitation (invasional meltdown), is occurring in this system. Removal of hyacinth may increase alligatorweed invasion through release from competition. However, removal of alligatorweed may have more complex effects on hyacinth patch dynamics because there were strong opposing effects on establishment versus growth. The mix of positive and negative interactions between floating and rooted aquatic plants may influence local population dynamics of each group and thus overall invasion pressure in this watershed.
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spelling doaj.art-28732b68aeef4a60bc1dc429a50317632022-12-22T03:14:02ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01710e4844410.1371/journal.pone.0048444Facilitation and competition among invasive plants: a field experiment with alligatorweed and water hyacinth.Emily J WundrowJuli CarrilloChristopher A GablerKatherine C HornEvan SiemannEcosystems that are heavily invaded by an exotic species often contain abundant populations of other invasive species. This may reflect shared responses to a common factor, but may also reflect positive interactions among these exotic species. Armand Bayou (Pasadena, TX) is one such ecosystem where multiple species of invasive aquatic plants are common. We used this system to investigate whether presence of one exotic species made subsequent invasions by other exotic species more likely, less likely, or if it had no effect. We performed an experiment in which we selectively removed exotic rooted and/or floating aquatic plant species and tracked subsequent colonization and growth of native and invasive species. This allowed us to quantify how presence or absence of one plant functional group influenced the likelihood of successful invasion by members of the other functional group. We found that presence of alligatorweed (rooted plant) decreased establishment of new water hyacinth (free-floating plant) patches but increased growth of hyacinth in established patches, with an overall net positive effect on success of water hyacinth. Water hyacinth presence had no effect on establishment of alligatorweed but decreased growth of existing alligatorweed patches, with an overall net negative effect on success of alligatorweed. Moreover, observational data showed positive correlations between hyacinth and alligatorweed with hyacinth, on average, more abundant. The negative effect of hyacinth on alligatorweed growth implies competition, not strong mutual facilitation (invasional meltdown), is occurring in this system. Removal of hyacinth may increase alligatorweed invasion through release from competition. However, removal of alligatorweed may have more complex effects on hyacinth patch dynamics because there were strong opposing effects on establishment versus growth. The mix of positive and negative interactions between floating and rooted aquatic plants may influence local population dynamics of each group and thus overall invasion pressure in this watershed.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3484115?pdf=render
spellingShingle Emily J Wundrow
Juli Carrillo
Christopher A Gabler
Katherine C Horn
Evan Siemann
Facilitation and competition among invasive plants: a field experiment with alligatorweed and water hyacinth.
PLoS ONE
title Facilitation and competition among invasive plants: a field experiment with alligatorweed and water hyacinth.
title_full Facilitation and competition among invasive plants: a field experiment with alligatorweed and water hyacinth.
title_fullStr Facilitation and competition among invasive plants: a field experiment with alligatorweed and water hyacinth.
title_full_unstemmed Facilitation and competition among invasive plants: a field experiment with alligatorweed and water hyacinth.
title_short Facilitation and competition among invasive plants: a field experiment with alligatorweed and water hyacinth.
title_sort facilitation and competition among invasive plants a field experiment with alligatorweed and water hyacinth
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3484115?pdf=render
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