Abstract

To answer the long‐standing question if we can predict plant invader success based on characteristics of the environment (invasibility) or the invasive species (invasiveness), or the combination of both, there is a need for detailed observational studies in which habitat properties, non‐native plant traits, and the resulting invader success are locally measured. In this study, we assess the interaction of gradients in the environmental and trait space on non‐native species fitness, expressed as seed production, for a set of 10 invasive and noninvasive non‐native species along a wide range of invaded sites in Flanders. In our multidimensional approach, most of the single environmental gradients (temperature, light availability, native plant species diversity, and soil fertility) and sets of non‐native plant traits (plant size, photosynthesis, and foliar chemical attributes) related positively with invader seed production. Yet correlation with seed production was much stronger when several environmental gradients were assessed in interaction, and even more so when we combined plant traits and habitat properties. The latter increased explanatory power of the models on average by 25% for invasive and by 7% for noninvasive species. Additionally, we report a 70‐fold higher seed production in invasive than in noninvasive species and fundamentally different correlations of seed production with plant traits and habitat properties in noninvasive versus invasive species. We conclude that locally measured traits and properties deserve much more attention than they currently get in invasion literature and thus encourage further studies combining this level of detail with the generality of a multiregion and multispecies approach across different stages of invasion.

Highlights

  • One of the fundamental and long-­standing questions in invasion ecology is if we can predict invasion success based either on characteristics of the environment or traits of the invasive species (Hayes and Barry, 2008; Hui et al, 2016; Richardson &Pysek, 2006)

  • Most single habitat properties and plant traits related positively, albeit sometimes weakly, to invader seed production (Figure 3), consistent with the patterns most commonly observed in the literature

  • Our ability to observe interactions between habitat properties and plant traits heavily relied on the local nature of our approach

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

One of the fundamental and long-­standing questions in invasion ecology is if we can predict invasion success based either on characteristics of the environment (invasibility) or traits of the invasive species (invasiveness) We combined an unprecedented amount of detailed measurements on plant traits and habitat properties at the population scale along a large set of invaded sites in Flanders, for 10 invasive and noninvasive non-­native species. Along these gradients of variation in environmental conditions and plant traits, we assessed the relative role of invasiveness and invasibility in non-­native species fitness, expressed as seed production. The direction and importance of each factor and interaction might differ between invasive and noninvasive species

| Design
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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