Abstract

Abstract Human‐modified tropical landscapes are often invaded by exotic plant species, but relatively few species are able to colonise remnant areas of rainforest embedded within such landscapes. The functional traits of successful invaders of natural versus anthropogenic habitats are poorly known, especially in tropical regions, and identifying such traits provides insight into the mechanisms that drive invasion. Here, we examine the invasion of tropical rainforest remnants along a disturbance gradient, within a human‐modified agricultural landscape, and determine whether exotic species that invade these forests are selected according to particular traits. We surveyed the occurrence of 18 exotic species along 100‐m transects in four habitats—oil palm road, forest‐oil palm edges and disturbed and intact forest within rainforest remnants—at 21 sites across Sabah, Malaysian Borneo. We collated data on four functional traits relevant to the barriers plants encounter when colonising new environments (e.g. dispersal and persistence) and tested whether trait filtering occurs during invasion of rainforest remnants. Exotic species richness declined significantly from oil palm (mean 9.2 species per transect) to forest edge (7.8 species) to inside rainforest remnants (3.1 species in disturbed forest), and only one species, Clidemia hirta, invaded intact forest. Exotic communities within rainforest remnants had long‐distance (vertebrate) dispersal, were woodier and had taller maximum heights, compared to those found in oil palm. For each trait, the community‐weighted mean for the forest edge community was intermediate between oil palm and disturbed forest, suggesting trait filtering during the invasion of rainforest remnants. Our study provides strong evidence that trait filtering occurs during invasion from human‐modified agricultural habitats into previously disturbed forests via the forest edge. Successful invasion of rainforest remnants requires relatively long‐distance dispersal, in particular by vertebrates, as well as traits that are more similar to those of native forest species (i.e. tall and woody), making these exotic species more able to compete and persist in that environment. Our results show that disturbed tropical rainforests with open canopies are susceptible to invasion and highlight the traits of exotic species which can invade rainforest habitats, and which may pose a threat to regenerating tropical rainforests. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.

Highlights

  • Understanding the processes driving plant invasion within different ecosystems has been a long-standing goal of ecological science (Elton, 1958; Lodge, 1993)

  • In this study we investigate, for the first time, the spread of exotic plants along a gradient of disturbance from highly invaded, anthropogenic habitats into native tropical rainforest remnants that are recovering from disturbance, and test whether there is selection for particular traits across the disturbance gradient

  • The number of exotic species and their occurrence decreased along the disturbance gradient, which is likely partly attributed to the reduction in resource availability, as well as other factors that vary between habitat

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Understanding the processes driving plant invasion within different ecosystems has been a long-standing goal of ecological science (Elton, 1958; Lodge, 1993). Deforestation across the tropics, due to recent expansion of large-scale agricultural practices, has resulted in exotic plant species being frequently introduced by humans via newly created transport networks (Hulme, 2009; Levine & D'Antonio, 2003; Seebens et al, 2015) These heavily invaded agricultural areas may act as sources of exotic propagules that disperse into areas of native forest retained within these landscapes as conservation set-asides (Waddell, Banin, et al, 2020). We expect the exotic community inside the forest to have traits that indicate efficient dispersal and allow propagules to readily spread from oil palm source populations into rainforest remnants (i.e. long-distance dispersal and small, light seeds), as well as traits that promote the establishment of persisting populations (higher maximum height, woody habit) and populations may either benefit from efficient dispersal of smaller seeds or resource provision of larger seeds

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
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