Moving Away From Limiting Similarity During Restoration: Timing of Arrival and Native Biomass Are Better Proxies of Invasion Suppression in Grassland Communities

A challenge in many restoration projects, in particular when establishing de novo communities, is the arrival and later dominance of invasive alien plants. This could potentially be avoided by designing invasion-resistant native communities. Several studies suggest achieving this by maximizing trait...

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Main Authors: Florencia A. Yannelli, Chloe MacLaren, Johannes Kollmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fevo.2020.00238/full
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author Florencia A. Yannelli
Florencia A. Yannelli
Chloe MacLaren
Johannes Kollmann
Johannes Kollmann
author_facet Florencia A. Yannelli
Florencia A. Yannelli
Chloe MacLaren
Johannes Kollmann
Johannes Kollmann
author_sort Florencia A. Yannelli
collection DOAJ
description A challenge in many restoration projects, in particular when establishing de novo communities, is the arrival and later dominance of invasive alien plants. This could potentially be avoided by designing invasion-resistant native communities. Several studies suggest achieving this by maximizing trait similarity between natives and potential invaders (“limiting similarity”), but evidence supporting this approach is mixed so far. Others pose that the relative time of arrival by native and invasive species (“priority effects”) could play a stronger role, yet this factor and its interaction with trait similarity is not fully understood in the context of ecological restoration. Thus, we hypothesized that multi-trait similarity would increase suppression of invasive species by native communities, and that the effect would be stronger when natives arrive first. We established two distinct communities of native central European grassland species based on native–invasive trait similarity, and then tested the introduction of invasive Ambrosia artemisiifolia and Solidago gigantea separately when arriving in the native communities at two times, i.e., sown either at the same time as the natives or 2 weeks after. For the traits selected, our data did not provide evidence for a limiting similarity effect, but rather supported priority effects. Both native communities more effectively suppressed invaders that arrived after the natives. In addition, the native community that produced the most biomass suppressed both invasive species more than the most ecologically similar community. This effect of biomass revealed that prioritizing native–invader ecological similarity can fail to account for other community characteristics that affect invasion resistance, such as biomass. Instead, native communities could be designed to enhance priority effects through the inclusion of early and fast developing species. We conclude that native community composition plays a significant role in the establishment success by invasive species, and resource pre-emption seems more significant than trait similarity. In terms of grassland restoration, native species should be selected based on plant traits related to fast emergence and early competitiveness.
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spelling doaj.art-38f1690ba75a4c5cad53fb2db63c2e9c2022-12-21T23:56:19ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution2296-701X2020-07-01810.3389/fevo.2020.00238554184Moving Away From Limiting Similarity During Restoration: Timing of Arrival and Native Biomass Are Better Proxies of Invasion Suppression in Grassland CommunitiesFlorencia A. Yannelli0Florencia A. Yannelli1Chloe MacLaren2Johannes Kollmann3Johannes Kollmann4Chair of Restoration Ecology, Department Ecology and Ecosystem Management, School of Life Sciences, Technical University of Munich, Freising, GermanyEcological Novelty Group, Institute of Biology, Department of Biology, Chemistry and Pharmacy, Freie Universitt Berlin, Berlin, GermanyDepartment of Sustainable Agriculture Sciences, Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, United KingdomChair of Restoration Ecology, Department Ecology and Ecosystem Management, School of Life Sciences, Technical University of Munich, Freising, GermanyNorwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO), Svanvik, NorwayA challenge in many restoration projects, in particular when establishing de novo communities, is the arrival and later dominance of invasive alien plants. This could potentially be avoided by designing invasion-resistant native communities. Several studies suggest achieving this by maximizing trait similarity between natives and potential invaders (“limiting similarity”), but evidence supporting this approach is mixed so far. Others pose that the relative time of arrival by native and invasive species (“priority effects”) could play a stronger role, yet this factor and its interaction with trait similarity is not fully understood in the context of ecological restoration. Thus, we hypothesized that multi-trait similarity would increase suppression of invasive species by native communities, and that the effect would be stronger when natives arrive first. We established two distinct communities of native central European grassland species based on native–invasive trait similarity, and then tested the introduction of invasive Ambrosia artemisiifolia and Solidago gigantea separately when arriving in the native communities at two times, i.e., sown either at the same time as the natives or 2 weeks after. For the traits selected, our data did not provide evidence for a limiting similarity effect, but rather supported priority effects. Both native communities more effectively suppressed invaders that arrived after the natives. In addition, the native community that produced the most biomass suppressed both invasive species more than the most ecologically similar community. This effect of biomass revealed that prioritizing native–invader ecological similarity can fail to account for other community characteristics that affect invasion resistance, such as biomass. Instead, native communities could be designed to enhance priority effects through the inclusion of early and fast developing species. We conclude that native community composition plays a significant role in the establishment success by invasive species, and resource pre-emption seems more significant than trait similarity. In terms of grassland restoration, native species should be selected based on plant traits related to fast emergence and early competitiveness.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fevo.2020.00238/fullbiotic resistancelimiting similaritypriority effectsrestoration ecologyrevegetation
spellingShingle Florencia A. Yannelli
Florencia A. Yannelli
Chloe MacLaren
Johannes Kollmann
Johannes Kollmann
Moving Away From Limiting Similarity During Restoration: Timing of Arrival and Native Biomass Are Better Proxies of Invasion Suppression in Grassland Communities
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
biotic resistance
limiting similarity
priority effects
restoration ecology
revegetation
title Moving Away From Limiting Similarity During Restoration: Timing of Arrival and Native Biomass Are Better Proxies of Invasion Suppression in Grassland Communities
title_full Moving Away From Limiting Similarity During Restoration: Timing of Arrival and Native Biomass Are Better Proxies of Invasion Suppression in Grassland Communities
title_fullStr Moving Away From Limiting Similarity During Restoration: Timing of Arrival and Native Biomass Are Better Proxies of Invasion Suppression in Grassland Communities
title_full_unstemmed Moving Away From Limiting Similarity During Restoration: Timing of Arrival and Native Biomass Are Better Proxies of Invasion Suppression in Grassland Communities
title_short Moving Away From Limiting Similarity During Restoration: Timing of Arrival and Native Biomass Are Better Proxies of Invasion Suppression in Grassland Communities
title_sort moving away from limiting similarity during restoration timing of arrival and native biomass are better proxies of invasion suppression in grassland communities
topic biotic resistance
limiting similarity
priority effects
restoration ecology
revegetation
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fevo.2020.00238/full
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