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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Spider responses to alien plant invasion : the effect of short- and long-term Chromolaena odorata invasion and management

TLDR
The data show that the removal of alien invasive plants benefits biodiversity with immediate effects, highlighting that management should be carried out to control this invasive, even if the area has been invaded for a long period of time.
Abstract
Summary 1. Invasions by alien plants into unspoiled ecosystems are a cause for concern because the pristine systems are important stores of biodiversity. Indeed, the introduction of non-indigenous species into protected areas is a direct threat to conservation. Consequently, it is fundamental to document the impact that alien invasive plants have on native communities and to determine if, and at what rate, native communities re-establish following the removal of invasives. 2. Chromolaena odorata is one of the most important invader species in the savanna biome in South Africa. It reduces vegetation heterogeneity in grasslands, savannas and forests. 3. Spiders, as ecological indicators for change, were used to investigate the impact of (i) C. odorata invasions, (ii) C. odorata invasion durations, and (iii) the impact of clearing C. odorata on abundance, assemblage patterns, diversity and estimated species richness of spiders. 4. The progressive invasion of C. odorata with increasing invasion duration brings with it changes in native spider abundance, assemblage patterns, diversity and estimated species richness. Native spider assemblages do re-establish after clearing C. odorata without further management intervention. Small lingering differences are observed between the native and the cleared sites, suggesting that other features of the habitat may have been affected by the invasion and clearing. 5. Synthesis and applications . Alien clearance is an essential and invaluable management tool. There are a substantial number of programmes that aim to control alien invasive plants but very little is known about the way in which biodiversity recovers after alien plant removal. Our data show that the removal of alien invasive plants benefits biodiversity with immediate effects, highlighting that management should be carried out to control this invasive, even if the area has been invaded for a long period of time. These data are important for policy-forming and informing policy-makers that alien invasion and removal are critical for biodiversity conservation management.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of invasive plants on arthropods.

TL;DR: Understanding responses of arthropods to invasive plants will critically inform conservation of virtually all biodiversity and ecological processes because so many organisms depend on arthropod as prey or for their functional roles, including pollination, seed dispersal, and decomposition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plant invasion science in protected areas: progress and priorities

TL;DR: Invasive alien species are a major problem for managers of protected areas (PAs) worldwide as mentioned in this paper, and the status and macro-ecological patterns of alien plant invasions, threats that invasive alien plants pose and the impacts detected to date, current focus of invasion science in PAs, and research priorities for advancing science-based management and policy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental plant invasion reduces arthropod abundance and richness across multiple trophic levels

TL;DR: In this paper, a non-native plant (Microstegium vimineum, Japanese stiltgrass) was introduced in a community re-assembly experiment, and the authors investigated possible mechanisms through which the invader could affect associated arthropods, including changes in native plant species richness, above-ground plant biomass, light availability and vegetation height.
Journal ArticleDOI

Invasive plants have different effects on trophic structure of green and brown food webs in terrestrial ecosystems: a meta-analysis.

TL;DR: Overall, invasive plants had the most pronounced effects on the trophic structure of wetlands and woodlands, but caused no detectable changes to grassland trophics, which clearly differed between ecosystems.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Biological invasions by exotic grasses, the grass/fire cycle, and global change

TL;DR: Biological invasions into wholly new regions are a consequence of a far reaching but underappreciated component of global environmental change, the human-caused breakdown of biogeographic barriers to species dispersal.
Book

Biology of Spiders

TL;DR: An updated translation of the definitive text on spider biology by the author of the second German-language edition from Thieme Verlag, with greater emphasis on ecology and systematics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms underlying the impacts of exotic plant invasions

TL;DR: It is found that, while numerous studies have examined the impacts of invasions on plant diversity and composition, less than 5% test whether these effects arise through competition, allelopathy, alteration of ecosystem variables or other processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecological Theory and Community Restoration Ecology

TL;DR: Practical restoration efforts should rely heavily on what is known from theoretical and empirical research on how communities develop and are structured over time, and are identified specific areas that are in critical need of further research to advance the science of restoration ecology.
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