Student Publications
Invasiveness, invasibility and the role of environmental stress in the spread of non-native plants
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Invasion ecology, the study of how organisms spread in habitats to which they are not native, asks both about the invasiveness of species and the invasibility of habitats: Which species are most likely to become invasive? Which habitats are most susceptible to invasion? To set the stage for considering these questions with regard to plants, we offer a two-way classification of nativeness and invasiveness that distinguishes natives, non-invasive non-natives and invasive non-natives. We then consider the current state of knowledge about invasiveness and invasibility. Despite much investigation, it has proven difficult to identify traits that consistently predict invasiveness. This may be largely because different traits favour invasiveness in different habitats. It has proven easier to identify types of habitats that are relatively invasible, such as islands and riverbanks. Factors thought to render habitats invasible include low intensities of competition, altered disturbance regimes and low levels of environmental stress, especially high resource availability. These factors probably often interact; the combination of altered disturbance with high resource availability may particularly promote invasibility. When biotic factors control invasibility, non-natives that are unlike native species may prove more invasive; the converse may also be true. We end with a simple conceptual model for cases in which high levels of environmental stress should and should not reduce invasibility. In some cases, it may be possible to manipulate stress to control biological invasions by plants.
Publication Title
Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics
Publication Date
2000
Volume
3
Issue
1
First Page
52
Last Page
66
ISSN
1433-8319
DOI
10.1078/1433-8319-00004
Keywords
environmental stress, habitat invasibility, invasive plant species, nonnative, resource availability
Repository Citation
Alpert, Peter; Bone, Elizabeth; and Holzapfel, Claus, "Invasiveness, invasibility and the role of environmental stress in the spread of non-native plants" (2000). Student Publications. 37.
https://commons.clarku.edu/student_publications/37