Abstract

The specific mechanisms that result in the success of any species invasion case are difficult to document. Reproductive strategies are often cited as a primary driver of invasive success, with human activities further facilitating invasions by, for example, acting as seed vectors for dispersal via road, train, air, and marine traffic, and by producing efficient corridors for movement including canals, drainages, and roadways. Sahara mustard (Brassica tournefortii) is a facultative autogamous annual native to Eurasia that has rapidly invaded the southwestern United States within the past century, displacing natives, and altering water‐limited landscapes in the southwest. We used a genotyping‐by‐sequencing approach to study the population structure and spatial geography of Sahara mustard from 744 individuals from 52 sites across the range of the species’ invasion. We also used herbaria records to model range expansion since its initial introduction in the 1920s. We found that Sahara mustard occurs as three populations in the United States unstructured by geography, identified three introduction sites, and combined herbaria records with genomic analyses to map the spread of the species. Low genetic diversity and linkage disequilibrium are consistent with self‐fertilization, which likely promoted rapid invasive spread. Overall, we found that Sahara mustard experienced atypical expansion patterns, with a relatively constant rate of expansion and without the lag phase that is typical of many invasive species.

Highlights

  • Successful invasions often occur when the dispersal barriers that prevent species movement break down (van Kleunen, Dawson, & Maurel, 2015; Mooney & Cleland, 2001; Wilson, Dormontt, Prentis, Lowe, & Richardson, 2009)

  • Population genetic studies of invasive species have often revealed that a mixed set of processes dictate population structure, making it difficult to find a general suite of successful invasive characteristics (Sakai et al, 2001; Simberloff et al, 2013)

  • Linkage disequilibrium and overall genetic diversity were low across the invaded range of Sahara mustard

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Sahara mus‐ tard is an invasive throughout much of Australia (Chauhan, Gill, & Preston, 2006), South Africa (McGeoch, Kalwij, & Rhodes, 2009), Chile (Teillier, Prina, & Lund, 2014), and more recently, western North America (Li, Dlugosch, & Enquist, 2015) It germinates under a wide range of temperatures, light, soil conditions, and depths (Bangle, Walker, & Powell, 2008; Chauhan et al, 2006; Jurado & Westoby, 1992; Thanos et al, 1991), and it produces seeds rapidly We posit both that multiple intro‐ ductions are likely and that population structure has been shaped by ecosystems across the invaded range

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
CONFLICT OF INTEREST

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