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Temporal changes in native-exotic richness correlations during early post-fire succession
Institution:1. Institute for Peat and Mire Research, Northeast Normal University, State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory of Wetland Ecology and Vegetation Restoration, Renmin 5268, Changchun 130024, PR China;2. Institute of Grassland Sciences, Northeast Normal University, Key Laboratory for Vegetation Ecology, Ministry of Education, Changchun, PR China;3. Swedish Species Information Centre, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, PO Box 7007, SE-750 07, Uppsala, Sweden;1. Department of Botany and Zoology, Masaryk University, Kotlářská 2, CZ-611 37 Brno, Czechia;2. Department of Vegetation Ecology, Institute of Botany, The Czech Academy of Sciences, Lidická 25/27, CZ-657 20 Brno, Czechia;3. Institute of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, National Taiwan University, No. 1, Sec. 4, Roosevelt Rd., 10617 Taipei, Taiwan;4. School of Forestry and Resource Conservation, National Taiwan University, No. 1, Sec. 4, Roosevelt Rd., 10617 Taipei, Taiwan;1. Estación Forestal INTA-Villa Dolores (EEA Manfredi - Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria), Camino Viejo a San José km 1, (5870) Villa Dolores, Pcia, Córdoba, Argentina;2. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Argentina;1. Laboratorio de Ecologia, CCBS, Universidade Federal do Mato Grosso do Sul, Campo Grande, MS 79070-900, Brazil;2. Departmento de Ecologia, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, RN, 59078-900, Brazil
Abstract:The relationship between native and exotic richness has mostly been studied with respect to space (i.e., positive at larger scales, but negative or more variable at smaller scales) and its temporal patterns have rarely been investigated. Although some studies have monitored the temporal trends of both native and exotic richness, how these two groups of species might be related to each other and how their relative proportions vary through time in a local community remains unclear. Re-analysis of early post-fire successional data for a California chaparral community shows that, in the same communities and at small spatial scales, the native-exotic correlations varied through time. Both exotic richness and exotic fraction (i.e., the proportion of exotic species in the flora) quickly increased and then gradually declined, during the initial stages of succession following fire disturbance. This result sheds new light on habitat invasibility and has implications for timing the implementation of effective management actions to prevent and/or mitigate species invasions.
Keywords:Competition  Degree of invasion  Disturbance  Habitat invasibility  Temporal trends
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