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Traits Associated with Invasiveness in Alien Plants: Where Do we Stand?

TLDR
In the current human-mediated biodiversity crisis, where alien species play an important role, we need to know whether some species are inherently better equipped to become invasive when moved to new areas by humans as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
Any organism must be equipped for life in a given environment, otherwise it will die. The fundamental question is how well does an organism need to be “equipped”, or what syndrome of traits must it possess to survive and flourish at a given locality. In the current human-mediated biodiversity crisis, where alien species play an important role, we need to know whether some species are inherently better equipped to become invasive when moved to new areas by humans. If so, we can identify such species and consider management options to prevent, or at least reduce the damaging effects of biological invasions. Despite the importance of chance and timing in the establishment and spread of alien plants (Crawley 1989), invasions are clearly not entirely random events (Crawley et al. 1996). Much of the early work on invasions was directed at collating traits associated with invasiveness (Booth et al. 2003). The question of whether is it possible to determine a set of traits that predispose a species to be invasive has been a central theme since the emergence of invasion ecology as a discrete field of study (Richardson and Pysek 2006). Many studies have attempted to profile successful invaders, starting with Herbert Baker’s attempt to identify the traits of an “ideal weed” (Baker 1965), an idea now considered simplistic (Perrins et al. 1993). Baker defined as a weed a plant growing “entirely or predominantly in situations markedly disturbed by man (without, of course, being deliberately cultivated plants)”. To him, weeds included plants that encroached onto agricultural land (agrestals), and those occurring in waste places (ruderals; Baker 1965). There was no explicit reference to the status of the species as being native or alien. Perhaps it was the two species pairs he used to document different traits of “weedy”

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A meta‐analysis of trait differences between invasive and non‐invasive plant species

TL;DR: It is concluded that invasive alien species had higher values for those traits related to performance than non-invasive species, suggesting that it might become possible to predict future plant invasions from species traits.
Journal ArticleDOI

The LEDA Traitbase: A database of life-history traits of the Northwest European flora

TL;DR: The LEDA Traitbase is useful for large-scale analyses of functional responses of communities to environmental change, effects of community trait composition on ecosystem properties and patterns of rarity and invasiveness, as well as linkages between traits as expressions of fundamental trade-offs in plants.
Journal ArticleDOI

A global assessment of invasive plant impacts on resident species, communities and ecosystems: the interaction of impact measures, invading species' traits and environment

TL;DR: It is shown that there is no universal measure of impact and the pattern observed depends on the ecological measure examined, and some species traits, especially life form, stature and pollination syndrome, may provide a means to predict impact, regardless of the particular habitat and geographical region invaded.
References
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Book

Population Biology of Plants

Journal ArticleDOI

Population Biology of Plants.

Book

The comparative method in evolutionary biology

Paul H. Harvey, +1 more
TL;DR: The comparative method for studying adaptation why worry about phylogeny?
Journal ArticleDOI

Naturalization and invasion of alien plants: concepts and definitions

TL;DR: It is proposed that the term ‘invasive’ should be used without any inference to environmental or economic impact, and terms like ‘pests’ and ‘weeds’ are suitable labels for the 50–80% of invaders that have harmful effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Progress in invasion biology: predicting invaders

TL;DR: Although restricted to few taxa, these studies reveal clear relationships between the characteristics of releases and the species involved, and the successful establishment and spread of invaders.
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