Complex dynamics of plant invasions across spatial and invasion stages

Study of invasive plants in China suggests that having close relatives present makes introduction and naturalization easier—but becoming invasive takes being different

GBIF-mediated data resources used : 54,380 species occurrences
Phragmites australis
Common reed - Phragmites australis (Cav.) Trin. ex Steud. - observed in Wuxi, Jiangsu, China by wangwang2018 (CC BY-NC 4.0)

During plant invasions, phylogenetic relatedness of alien species to existing community members may either facilitate or hinder successful establishment, depending on the scale. Biotic interactions with other existing alien species at different stages of invasion, however, may also play a role.

In this study, researchers sought to determine the variation of phylogenetic relatedness of alien species across spatial scales, and whether the different stages—introduction, naturalization and invasion—showed similar patterns.

Working from a comprehensive list of all alien plant species in China, the authors extracted species occurrences from GBIF and the National Specimen Information Infrastructure (NSII), resulting in more than 87,000 records across 706 angiosperm plant species.

Based on molecular sequence data from GenBank, they constructed a phylogenetic tree and assessed phylogenetic relatedness of the species at different invasion stages, as well as spatial and taxonomic scales, using two measures: net relatedness index (NRI) and nearest taxon index (NTI).

Overall, analyses of the phylogenetic relatedness scores suggested that the presence of a close relative in a community may facilitate successful naturalization of an alien species. At the same time, the phylogenetic spaces of invasive species differed significantly from that of naturalized and introduced species, suggesting a need to be phylogenetically different in order to become invasive.

Banerjee AK, Tan F, Feng H, Liang X, Wang J, Yin M, et al. Invasive alien plants are phylogenetically distinct from other alien species across spatial and taxonomic scales in China. Frontiers in Plant Science [Internet]. 2023 Sep 7;14. Available from: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2023.1075344

  • {{'resourceSearch.filters.countriesOfResearcher' | translate}}:
  • China
  • {{'resourceSearch.filters.countriesOfCoverage' | translate}}:
  • China
  • {{'resourceSearch.filters.topics' | translate}}:
  • Phylogenetics
  • Invasives
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  • GBIF network
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  • Data analysis