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Volume 101, Issue 6 e03022
Article

Invasive species interact with climatic variability to reduce success of natives

Marina L. LaForgia

Corresponding Author

Marina L. LaForgia

Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, California, USA

E-mail: [email protected]

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Susan P. Harrison

Susan P. Harrison

Department of Environmental Science and Policy, University of California, Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, California, USA

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Andrew M. Latimer

Andrew M. Latimer

Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, California, USA

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First published: 21 February 2020
Citations: 11
Corresponding Editor: Joseph B. Yavitt.

Abstract

Plants have evolved resource-conservative and resource-acquisitive strategies to deal with variability in rainfall, but interactions with dominant invasive species may undermine these adaptations. To investigate the relative effect of invaders on species with these two strategies, we manipulated rainfall and invasive grass presence and measured demographic rates in three resource-acquisitive and three resource-conservative native annual forbs. We found that invasive grasses were harmful to all of the target species, but especially the resource-acquisitive ones, and that these effects were stronger under experimental drought. Invasive grass presence under drought lowered per capita population growth rates of acquisitive natives through increased mortality and decreased seed set. While invasive grasses also decreased per capita growth rates of resource-conservative natives, they did so by increasing mortality under experimental watering and by limiting the production of seed under experimental drought. Invasive species can thus interact with climatic fluctuations to make bad years worse for resource-acquisitive natives and good years less good for resource-conservative natives, and they may generally tend to undermine the acquisitive strategy more than the conservative one.

Data Availability

All data and scripts used in analyses can be accessed on Zenodo: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3653170