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Native communities determine the identity of exotic invaders even at scales at which communities are unsaturated
by
Deacon, Nicholas
, Cavender-Bares, Jeannine
, Davies, Kendi F.
in
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
/ Applied ecology
/ BIODIVERSITY RESEARCH
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Biological invasions
/ Biological taxonomies
/ biotic resistance
/ California
/ community invasibility
/ Community structure
/ correlation
/ diversity-invasibility paradox
/ Ecological genetics
/ Ecological invasion
/ Ecological niches
/ Ecosystem studies
/ ecosystems
/ Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
/ General aspects
/ Heterogeneity
/ Indexing in process
/ Indigenous species
/ Introduced species
/ Niches
/ phylogenetic diversity
/ Phylogenetics
/ phylogeny
/ Plants
/ Predation
/ prediction
/ serpentine
/ spatial scale
/ Species diversity
/ Species richness
/ Synecology
2011
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Native communities determine the identity of exotic invaders even at scales at which communities are unsaturated
by
Deacon, Nicholas
, Cavender-Bares, Jeannine
, Davies, Kendi F.
in
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
/ Applied ecology
/ BIODIVERSITY RESEARCH
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Biological invasions
/ Biological taxonomies
/ biotic resistance
/ California
/ community invasibility
/ Community structure
/ correlation
/ diversity-invasibility paradox
/ Ecological genetics
/ Ecological invasion
/ Ecological niches
/ Ecosystem studies
/ ecosystems
/ Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
/ General aspects
/ Heterogeneity
/ Indexing in process
/ Indigenous species
/ Introduced species
/ Niches
/ phylogenetic diversity
/ Phylogenetics
/ phylogeny
/ Plants
/ Predation
/ prediction
/ serpentine
/ spatial scale
/ Species diversity
/ Species richness
/ Synecology
2011
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Native communities determine the identity of exotic invaders even at scales at which communities are unsaturated
by
Deacon, Nicholas
, Cavender-Bares, Jeannine
, Davies, Kendi F.
in
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
/ Applied ecology
/ BIODIVERSITY RESEARCH
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Biological invasions
/ Biological taxonomies
/ biotic resistance
/ California
/ community invasibility
/ Community structure
/ correlation
/ diversity-invasibility paradox
/ Ecological genetics
/ Ecological invasion
/ Ecological niches
/ Ecosystem studies
/ ecosystems
/ Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
/ General aspects
/ Heterogeneity
/ Indexing in process
/ Indigenous species
/ Introduced species
/ Niches
/ phylogenetic diversity
/ Phylogenetics
/ phylogeny
/ Plants
/ Predation
/ prediction
/ serpentine
/ spatial scale
/ Species diversity
/ Species richness
/ Synecology
2011
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Native communities determine the identity of exotic invaders even at scales at which communities are unsaturated
Journal Article
Native communities determine the identity of exotic invaders even at scales at which communities are unsaturated
2011
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Overview
Aim To determine why some communities are more invasible than others and how this depends on spatial scale. Our previous work in serpentine ecosystems showed that native and exotic diversity are negatively correlated at small scales, but became positively correlated at larger scales. We hypothesized that this pattern was the result of classic niche partitioning at small scales where the environment is homogeneous, and a shift to the dominance of coexistence mechanisms that depend on spatial heterogeneity in the environment at large scales. Location Serpentine ecosystem, Northern California. Methods We test the above hypotheses using the phylogenetic relatedness of natives and exotics. We hypothesized that (1) at small scales, native and exotic species should be more distantly related than expected from a random assemblage model because with biotic resistance, successful invaders should have niches that are different from those of the natives present and (2) at large scales, native and exotic species should not be more distantly related than expected. Result We find strong support for the first hypothesis providing further evidence of biotic resistance at small scales. However, at large scales, native and exotic species were also more distantly related than expected. Importantly, however, natives and exotics were more distantly related at small scales than they were at large scales, suggesting that in the transition from small to large scales, biotic resistance is relaxed but still present. Communities at large scales were not saturated in the sense that more species could enter the community, increasing species richness. However, species did not invade indiscriminately. Exotic species closely related to species already established the community were excluded. Main conclusions Native communities determine the identity of exotic invaders even at large spatial scales where communities are unsaturated. These results hold promise for predicting which species will invade a community given the species present.
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd,Blackwell Publishing,Blackwell,John Wiley & Sons, Inc
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