入侵物种
引进物种
生态学
生物
河岸带
乡土植物
系统发育树
栖息地
新型生态系统
归化
生态系统
大洪水
地理
外星人
考古
公民身份
法学
基因
政治
生物化学
政治学
作者
Haichuan Le,Jiangtao Mao,Jeannine Cavender‐Bares,Jesús N. Pinto‐Ledezma,Ying Deng,Changming Zhao,Gaoming Xiong,Wenting Xu,Zongqiang Xie
摘要
Summary Darwin's two opposing hypotheses, proposing that non‐native species closely or distantly related to native species are more likely to succeed, are known as ‘Darwin's Naturalization Conundrum’. Recently, invasion ecologists have sought to unravel these hypotheses. Studies that incorporate rich observational data in disturbed ecosystems that integrate phylogenetic and functional perspectives have potential to shed light on the conundrum. Using 313 invaded plant communities including 46 invasive plant species and 531 native plant species across the Three Gorges Reservoir Area in China, we aim to evaluate the coexistence mechanisms of invasive and native plants by integrating phylogenetic and functional dimensions at spatial and temporal scales. Our findings revealed that invasive plants tended to co‐occur more frequently with native plant species that were phylogenetically distant but functionally similar in the reservoir riparian zone. Furthermore, our study demonstrated that the filtering of flood‐dry‐flood cycles played a significant role in deepening functional similarities of native communities and invasive‐native species over time. Our study highlights the contrasting effects of phylogenetic relatedness and functional similarity between invasive and native species in highly flood‐disturbed habitats, providing new sights into Darwin's Naturalization Conundrum.
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