Abstract

Factors such as increased mobility of humans, global trade and climate change are affecting the range of many species, and cause large-scale translocations of species beyond their native range. Many introduced species have a strong negative influence on the new local environment and lead to high economic costs. There is a strong interest to understand why some species are successful in invading new environments and others not. Most of our understanding and generalizations thereof, however, are based on studies of plants and animals, and little is known on invasion processes of microorganisms. We conducted a microcosm experiment to understand factors promoting the success of biological invasions of aquatic microorganisms. In a controlled lab experiment, protist and rotifer species originally isolated in North America invaded into a natural, field-collected community of microorganisms of European origin. To identify the importance of environmental disturbances on invasion success, we either repeatedly disturbed the local patches, or kept them as undisturbed controls. We measured both short-term establishment and long-term invasion success, and correlated it with species-specific life-history traits. We found that environmental disturbances significantly affected invasion success. Depending on the invading species’ identity, disturbances were either promoting or decreasing invasion success. The interaction between habitat disturbance and species identity was especially pronounced for long-term invasion success. Growth rate was the most important trait promoting invasion success, especially when the species invaded into a disturbed local community. We conclude that neither species traits nor environmental factors alone conclusively predict invasion success, but an integration of both of them is necessary.

Highlights

  • Natural barriers such as mountains or oceans limit the dispersal of species

  • Proportion of invasion success was used as the response variables

  • generalized linear models (GLM) were done with quasibinomial error distribution, and subsequent F-significance testing

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Summary

Introduction

Natural barriers such as mountains or oceans limit the dispersal of species. Due to increased mobility of humans [1], global trade [2] and climate change [3], various species get to regions outside their native range. Some of the alien species may be beneficial, like most intentionally introduced crop-plant species which serve as food for humans [4]. Exert strong negative impact on the new local environment by competition with or predation of native species. Invasive species cause a huge financial cost, adding up in the USA alone to more than $120 billion per year [1]. This just includes economic damages and control costs but not monetary values of ecological loss such as species extinctions or altered ecosystem services

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