首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Invasion patterns across multiple scales by Hieracium species over 25 years in tussock grasslands of New Zealand's South Island
Authors:NICOLA J. DAY  HANNAH L. BUCKLEY
Affiliation:Department of Ecology, PO Box 84, Lincoln University, Canterbury, New Zealand (Email: hannah.buckley@lincoln.ac.nz)
Abstract:Studying patterns of species invasions over time at multiple spatial scales may help us to elucidate important factors driving those patterns and how they change according to temporal or spatial resolution. Here we provide a large, long‐term, landscape‐scale study of the invasion of three Hieracium species using a dataset that encompasses vegetation change on 124 transects over 25 years across the lower eastern South Island of New Zealand. We investigated the relationships between key environmental and ecological factors and the invasion trajectories of H. lepidulum, H. pilosella and H. praealtum, at two spatial scales: (i) among‐transect colonization and (ii) within‐transect changes in frequency and per cent cover. Our results show that the colonization and spread of Hieracium species among and within transects reflect (i) the importance of initial environmental and biological conditions, (ii) that our sampling captured different periods of the invasion trajectories of each of the three species, and (iii) the effects of differences in life histories of the three species.
Keywords:Hieracium lepidulum  Hieracium pilosella  Hieracium praealtum  hierarchical Bayesian model  invasion  New Zealand  tussock grassland
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号