Early response of herbaceous vegetation to Rhododendron ponticum subsp. baeticum invasion in European Atlantic forests

Author:

Casati Marion1ORCID,Spicher Fabien1ORCID,Kichey Thomas1ORCID,Decocq Guillaume1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Edysan (UMR CNRS 7058) Université de Picardie Jules Verne Amiens Cedex France

Abstract

AbstractQuestionsRhododendron ponticum subsp. baeticum is an invasive shrub of growing concern in continental Europe, but little is known about its impact on native plant communities. Here we ask: do environmental conditions differ between forest stands invaded by it and uninvaded stands? Do these differences correlate with R. ponticum's cover? Are these differences associated with differences in taxonomic and functional diversity of vascular plant species of the herb layer? Can these vegetation changes be explained by the sorting of certain life‐history traits by R. ponticum‐induced environmental changes?LocationSeveral forests invaded by R. ponticum in the French Atlantic domain.MethodsWe recorded vegetation composition and a number of environmental variables in 400‐m2 plots that were established in 64 paired forest stands (32 invaded vs 32 uninvaded). We compiled traits from existing databases. We computed several metrics of taxonomic and functional diversity. We compared environmental variables and diversity metrics between invaded and uninvaded stands. We used correlation and regression analyses to relate them with R. ponticum's cover. We ran RLQ and fourth‐corner analyses to explore the relationships between R. ponticum invasion, environmental variables, species traits, and vegetation composition.ResultsIndependent of its abundance, R. ponticum invasion was associated with lower light arrival at the forest floor and increased litter thickness. Concomitantly, species richness and diversity and trait diversity were reduced. The major driver of species assemblages was soil pH, which strongly interacted with the invasion gradient. R. ponticum did not sort species according to traits associated with shade tolerance and thick‐litter tolerance. However, tree and shrub saplings were more abundant in invaded than uninvaded stands, at the expense of graminoid and fern species.ConclusionsAs R. ponticum becomes the dominant shrub, it exerts new selection forces on life‐history traits of extant species, mostly via reduced light availability, increased litter thickness, and physical competition, thereby reducing taxonomic and functional diversity of the herb layer, without impeding tree and shrub self‐regeneration, at least in the short term.

Funder

European Regional Development Fund

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology

Reference87 articles.

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