What Insight Does the Alien Plant Species Richness in Greece Offer for the Different Invasion Biology Hypotheses?

Author:

Kallimanis Athanasios1ORCID,Kokkoris Ioannis P.2ORCID,Bazos Ioannis3,Raus Thomas4ORCID,Strid Arne5,Dimopoulos Panayotis2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology, School of Biology, Aristotle University, 54124 Thessaloniki, Greece

2. Division of Plant Biology, Department of Biology, University of Patras, 26504 Patras, Greece

3. Department of Ecology and Systematics, Faculty of Biology, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Panepistimiopolis, 15701 Athens, Greece

4. Botanischer Garten und Botanisches Museum Berlin, Freie Universität Berlin, Königin-Luise-Straße 6-8, 14191 Berlin, Germany

5. Bakkevej 6, DK-5853 Ørbæk, Denmark

Abstract

Biological invasions are one of the main threats to biodiversity, but they also offer insights on different ecological processes, as highlighted by the hypotheses posited to explain the phenomenon. We explore the relative importance of different hypotheses using biotic (native diversity) and abiotic factors (climate and landscape configuration) as proxies driving the spatial pattern of alien plant biodiversity in Greece. The strongest predictor of alien species richness is native species richness. Landscape heterogeneity boosts this relationship, but native and alien species prefer different conditions. Landscape composition and configuration explain more of the variance of alien diversity than of native diversity, with native diversity increasing at more naturally vegetated areas and alien diversity at agricultural lands. Climate is associated more strongly with native diversity than with alien diversity, with native diversity increasing in colder regions and alien diversity in warmer regions. The transportation network was associated with higher alien species richness but not with native species richness, highlighting the importance of propagule/colonization pressure. These differences might indicate that aliens occupy part of the niche space that is not preferred by the natives and thus allow us to speculate on the role of limiting similarity as a driving force.

Funder

European Commission LIFE Integrated Project

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous),Ecological Modeling,Ecology

Reference55 articles.

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2. Reducing Redundancy in Invasion Ecology by Integrating Hypotheses into a Single Theoretical Framework;Catford;Divers. Distrib.,2009

3. A Conceptual Map of Invasion Biology: Integrating Hypotheses into a Consensus Network;Enders;Glob. Ecol. Biogeogr.,2020

4. Evaluating hypotheses of plant species invasions on Mediterranean islands: Inverse patterns between alien and endemic species;Bjarnason;Front. Ecol. Evol.,2017

5. Alien Fish in Neotropical Reservoirs: Assessing Multiple Hypotheses in Invasion Biology;Muniz;Ecol. Indic.,2021

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