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Species,community, and ecosystem-level responses following the invasion of the red alga <Emphasis Type="Italic">Dasysiphonia japonica</Emphasis> to the western North Atlantic Ocean
Authors:Christine Ramsay-Newton  Annick Drouin  A Randall Hughes  Matthew E S Bracken
Institution:1.Department of Life Sciences,Mitchell College,New London,USA;2.Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology, Marine Science Center,Northeastern University,Nahant,USA;3.Institut Maurice Lamontagne,Fisheries and Océans Canada,Québec,Canada;4.Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology,University of California,Irvine,USA
Abstract:Species invasions have been increasing in frequency worldwide, yet critical gaps remain in our understanding of how invaders affect community structure and ecosystem functioning, particularly during the initial stages of invasion. Even less is known about changes in the invader that may take place immediately following an invasion. This study examined the recent invasion of the red macroalga Dasysiphonia (formerly, Heterosiphonia) japonica to the western North Atlantic Ocean with the aim of filling in gaps in our understanding of the impacts that invasive seaweeds have at the species, community and ecosystem levels immediately following their establishment. Within 5 years of invasion, community composition had changed and biodiversity had decreased to nearly half of pre-invasion levels. In addition, the relative proportion of Dasysiphonia decreased by 35% over our four-year study from initially high levels shortly after establishment. We found evidence that functional traits of this initially aggressive invader changed over time, as it ultimately became a less aggressive, co-inhabiting member of the local algal community, particularly with respect to nutrient uptake and relative abundances, although native diversity remained low relative to pre-invasion levels. Using these realistic changes in community structure, including decreases in biodiversity, we also showed that nutrient uptake of algal assemblages changed over time, suggesting changes in the functional characteristics of invaded communities, with implications for ecosystem-level processes such as nutrient fluxes. This study provides rare empirical evidence about the successional stages occurring at the individual, community, and ecosystem levels during the first 5 years of an invasion.
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