Abstract

Although wetlands provide an important range of environmental, social and economic services, they are increasingly subjected to anthropogenic perturbations, amongst which invasion by alien plants is particularly alarming. This paper focuses on the alien flora of wetlands from three territories belonging to the western Mediterranean area: one continental (Valencian Community) and two insular (Balearic Islands and Sardinia), providing a complete checklist for the three territories and a general comparison. In total, 380 alien taxa from 89 families have been reported, being the Valencian Community the area richer in taxa (312), followed by the Balearic Islands (151) and Sardinia (134). The invasive component includes 77 taxa, of which nine are common to the three territories - and have been recognised as the most invasive ones in Mediterranean islands - and six are considered invasive worldwide (Ailanthus altissima, Arundo donax, Cortaderia selloana, Oxalis pes-caprae, Ricinus communis and Eichhornia crassipes). Multiple Correspondence Analysis (MCA) revealed that the three territories do not show statistically relevant differences in relation to the alien species present in wetlands and their characteristics. The information on the characteristics of plants in similar habitats of the same biogeographic region provides a portrait of the current dimensions of the phenomenon in Western Mediterranean wetlands and is especially useful from the management perspective: its predictive value can be applied in establishing a prioritization of control measures of those most invasive species and will help screening new introductions with invasive potential.

Highlights

  • Wetlands perform various valuable ecosystem services: they recycle nutrients, purify water, recharge ground water, and provide habitat for a wide variety of flora and fauna

  • This paper focuses on the alien flora of wetlands from three territories belonging to the western Mediterranean area: one continental (Valencian Community) and two insular (Balearic Islands and Sardinia), providing a complete checklist for the three territories and a general comparison

  • Disturbances have been related with the success of invasions and aquatic habitats are especially susceptible to biological invasions: flooding is a common

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Wetlands perform various valuable ecosystem services: they recycle nutrients, purify water, recharge ground water, and provide habitat for a wide variety of flora and fauna. The aim of the present study is to compare the alien flora of wetlands of islands vs continental Mediterranean areas and to analyse the differences in biological traits of invasive species among the regions analysed. The considered variables are: Territory (VC, BL, and SA), Name of taxa, Type (residence status: archaeophyte and neophyte), Life form (Ph, Th, Ge, He, Hy and Ch), Taxa origin (Africa, America, Asia, Australia, South Africa, Euroasia, Europe, Mediterranean and Saharo-Arabian, Others), Status (naturalised, invasive, casual), Introduction pathways ornamental (Yes or Not), Introduction pathways agriculture (Yes or Not), Introduction pathways forestry (Yes or Not), Introduction pathways seed contaminant (Yes or Not), Introduction pathways hitchhikers (Yes or Not), Environmental impact (Yes or Not), Economic impact (Yes or Not) and Health impact (Yes or Not).

Results
Discussion
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call