Invasion rates increase with species richness in a marine epibenthic community by two mechanisms |
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Authors: | Piers K Dunstan Craig R Johnson |
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Affiliation: | (1) School of Zoology and Tasmanian Aquaculture and Fisheries Institute, University of Tasmania, GPO Box 252-05, 7001 Hobart, Tasmania, Australia;(2) Present address: Division of Marine Research, CSIRO, Castray Esplanade, 7001 Hobart, Tasmania, Australia |
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Abstract: | It is widely believed that, when extrinsic conditions are similar, the likelihood of species invading established assemblages decreases with increasing species richness of the recipient community. Here we show that, for a sessile marine invertebrate community, invasion of patches increases with richness of the patch. We show that invasions can increase with local species richness by two distinct mechanisms. In the first, opportunistic colonisers with traits typical of invasive species colonise species-rich patches at higher rates because speciose patches are dominated by small colonies and mortality rates of small colonies are greater than that of large ones. Thus, mortality provides bare space for opportunists to colonise more frequently in species-rich patches. In the second, some species avoid colonising open areas of free space but preferentially associate with established colonies of particular other species, and a given preferred associate is more likely to occur in species-rich than in species-poor patches. These patterns are the result of particular properties of individual species and local species dynamics, and show that reduced risk of invasion is not necessarily an intrinsic property of species-rich communities. We conclude that resistance to invasion will be determined by the properties of the particular component species and emergent dynamics of the recipient community, and not by an aggregate community property such as richness. |
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Keywords: | Invasions Species richness Size-specific mortality Non-random associations Spatial structure Community dynamics |
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