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Persistent soil seed banks promote naturalisation and invasiveness in flowering plants

  • Margherita Gioria
  • , Angelino Carta
  • , Carol C. Baskin
  • , Wayne Dawson
  • , Franz Essl
  • , Holger Kreft
  • , Jan Pergl
  • , Mark van Kleunen
  • , Patrick Weigelt
  • , Marten Winter
  • , Petr Pyšek

Producción científica: Articlerevisión exhaustiva

59 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

With globalisation facilitating the movement of plants and seeds beyond the native range, preventing potentially harmful introductions requires knowledge of what drives the successful establishment and spread of alien plants. Here, we examined global-scale relationships between naturalisation success (incidence and extent) and invasiveness, soil seed bank properties (type and densities) and key species traits (seed mass, seed dormancy and life form) for 2350 species of angiosperms. Naturalisation and invasiveness were strongly associated with the ability to form persistent (vs. transient) seed banks but relatively weakly with seed bank densities and other traits. Our findings suggest that seed bank persistence is a trait that better captures the ability to become naturalised and invasive compared to seed traits more widely available in trait databases. Knowledge of seed persistence can contribute to our ability to predict global naturalisation and invasiveness and to identify potentially invasive flowering plants before they are introduced.

Idioma originalEnglish
Páginas (desde-hasta)1655-1667
Número de páginas13
PublicaciónEcology Letters
Volumen24
N.º8
DOI
EstadoPublished - ago 2021

Nota bibliográfica

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Authors. Ecology Letters published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Financiación

This work was supported by projects no. 19-20405S and EXPRO grant no. 19-28807X (Czech Science Foundation), and long-term research development project RVO 67985939 (Czech Academy of Sciences). FE acknowledges funding by the Austrian Science Foundation FWF (grant I 3757-B29). MW acknowledges funding by the German Research Foundation (via iDiv: DFG FZT 118, 202548816). We appreciate the helpful comments of the Handling Editor (Vanessa Ezenewa), Angela Moles, Dane Panetta and an anonymous reviewer. This work was supported by projects no. 19\u201020405S and EXPRO grant no. 19\u201028807X (Czech Science Foundation), and long\u2010term research development project RVO 67985939 (Czech Academy of Sciences). FE acknowledges funding by the Austrian Science Foundation FWF (grant I 3757\u2010B29). MW acknowledges funding by the German Research Foundation (via iDiv: DFG FZT 118, 202548816). We appreciate the helpful comments of the Handling Editor (Vanessa Ezenewa), Angela Moles, Dane Panetta and an anonymous reviewer.

FinanciadoresNúmero del financiador
Akademie Věd České Republiky
Austrian Science Fund/FWFI 3757, I 3757‐B29
Deutsche ForschungsgemeinschaftDFG FZT 118, 202548816
Grantová Agentura České RepublikyRVO 67985939

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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