/wg-neon-invasibility

Synthesis working group -- The Other Side of Invasibility: Vulnerability of Recipient Ecosystems

The Other Side of Invasibility: Vulnerability of Recipient Ecosystems

Increasing non-native plant abundance leads to substantial declines in native plant diversity. Because of the magnitude of these impacts, a primary focus of invasion ecology has been identifying traits that make plants more likely to become invasive. But, it is increasingly clear that the characteristics of the recipient ecosystem are equally important for understanding and predicting vulnerability to invasions. Vulnerability of the recipient ecosystem is likely influenced by the landscape context, including composition of the ecological community, abiotic conditions, and surrounding land use. However, the relative importance of these factors and how they vary between ecosystems is unknown, largely because consistent community- level data have not been available across broad ecological gradients. We propose to leverage extensive, consistent, community-level plant surveys collected by the National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON) and others to measure how invasive plant impacts differ across a range of recipient ecosystems. By assessing variation in the impact of biological invasions across ecosystems, we will identify the landscape processes that lead to higher impact (higher ecological vulnerability). This analysis will provide a first macroscale assessment of the vulnerability of native ecosystems to invasion.

PIs

Bethany Bradley (PI)

Inés Ibañez (CoPI)

For more: https://www.nceas.ucsb.edu/workinggroups/other-side-invasibility-vulnerability-recipient-ecosystems