Abstract
Anthropogenic modification of habitats may reduce the resources available for native species, leading to population declines and extinction. These same habitats often have the highest richness of non-native species. This pattern may be explained if recently human-modified habitats provide novel resources that are more accessible to non-native species than native species. Using non-native birds in the Iberian Peninsula as a case study, we conduct a large-scale study to investigate whether non-native species are positively associated with human modified habitats, and to investigate whether this positive association may be driven by the presence of resources that are not fully exploited by native species. We do this by comparing the functional diversity and resource use of native and non-native bird communities in a recently human-modified habitat (rice fields) and in more traditional habitats in the Iberian Peninsula. The functional diversity of native bird communities was lower in rice fields, but non-native birds were positively associated with rice fields and plugged this gap. Differences in resource use between native and non-native species allowed non-native species to exploit resources that were plentiful in rice fields, supporting the role of underexploited resources in driving the positive association of non-native birds with rice fields. Our results provide a potential mechanism explaining the positive association of non-native species with anthropogenic habitats, and further work is needed to test if this applies more generally.
Highlights
One of the most fundamental questions in ecology is the extent to which communities are saturated with species [1, 2]
Differences in these proportions were fairly small for many species, indicating that non-native species were not restricted to rice fields and most widely recorded native species occurred in rice fields to an extent
The density of native species was lower in rice fields than in other habitats (χ2 = 3.951, P = 0.047, Fig 2), with significantly lower densities of serin Serinus serinus and greenfinch Carduelis chloris in rice fields (Fig 2)
Summary
One of the most fundamental questions in ecology is the extent to which communities are saturated with species [1, 2]. The transport and introduction of non-native species to new areas has provided a natural experiment to investigate this [3]. The ability of many non-native species to establish in communities without a corresponding extinction of native species demonstrates.
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