Litcius/Paper detail

Positive interactions of native species melt invasional meltdown over <scp>long‐term</scp> plant succession

Deyi Yin, Scott J. Meiners, Ming Ni, Qing Ye, Fangliang He, Marc W. Cadotte

2022Ecology Letters18 citationsDOI

Abstract

Positive interactions have been hypothesised to influence plant community dynamics and species invasions. However, their prevalence and importance relative to negative interactions remain unclear to understand community change and invasibility. We examined pairwise biotic interactions using over 50 years of successional data to assess the prevalence of positive interactions and their effects on each focal species (either native or exotic). We found that positive interactions were widespread and the relative frequency of positive and negative interactions varied with establishment stage and between native and exotic species. Specifically, positive interactions were more frequent during early establishment and less frequent at later stages. Positive interactions involving native species were more frequent and stronger than those between exotic species, reducing the importance of invasional meltdown on succession. Our study highlights the role of positive native interactions in shielding communities from biological invasion and enhancing the potential for long-term resilience.

Topics & Concepts

Ecological successionBiologyIntroduced speciesInvasive speciesEcologyNative plantEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesPlant and animal studiesPlant Parasitism and Resistance