Horáčková Jitka, Juřičková Lucie, Šizling Arnošt L, Jarošík Vojtěch, Pyšek Petr
Department of Ecology, Charles University in Prague, Faculty of Science, Prague 2, Czech Republic; Department of Zoology, Charles University in Prague, Faculty of Science, Prague 2, Czech Republic.
Department of Zoology, Charles University in Prague, Faculty of Science, Prague 2, Czech Republic.
PLoS One. 2014 Sep 19;9(9):e108296. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0108296. eCollection 2014.
Studies of plant invasions rarely address impacts on molluscs. By comparing pairs of invaded and corresponding uninvaded plots in 96 sites in floodplain forests, we examined effects of four invasive alien plants (Impatiens glandulifera, Fallopia japonica, F. sachalinensis, and F.× bohemica) in the Czech Republic on communities of land snails. The richness and abundance of living land snail species were recorded separately for all species, rare species listed on the national Red List, and small species with shell size below 5 mm. The significant impacts ranged from 16-48% reduction in snail species numbers, and 29-90% reduction in abundance. Small species were especially prone to reduction in species richness by all four invasive plant taxa. Rare snails were also negatively impacted by all plant invaders, both in terms of species richness or abundance. Overall, the impacts on snails were invader-specific, differing among plant taxa. The strong effect of I. glandulifera could be related to the post-invasion decrease in abundance of tall nitrophilous native plant species that are a nutrient-rich food source for snails in riparian habitats. Fallopia sachalinensis had the strongest negative impact of the three knotweeds, which reflects differences in their canopy structure, microhabitat humidity and litter decomposition. The ranking of Fallopia taxa according to the strength of impacts on snail communities differs from ranking by their invasiveness, known from previous studies. This indicates that invasiveness does not simply translate to impacts of invasion and needs to be borne in mind by conservation and management authorities.
关于植物入侵的研究很少涉及对软体动物的影响。通过比较泛滥平原森林中96个地点的入侵地块和相应的未入侵地块,我们研究了捷克共和国的四种外来入侵植物(凤仙花、日本虎杖、库页虎杖和波希米亚虎杖)对陆地蜗牛群落的影响。分别记录了所有物种、列入国家红色名录的珍稀物种以及壳长小于5毫米的小型物种的活陆地蜗牛物种丰富度和数量。显著影响包括蜗牛物种数量减少16% - 48%,数量减少29% - 90%。所有四种入侵植物类群都特别容易使小型物种的物种丰富度降低。珍稀蜗牛在物种丰富度或数量方面也受到所有植物入侵者的负面影响。总体而言,对蜗牛的影响因入侵者而异,不同植物类群之间存在差异。凤仙花的强烈影响可能与入侵后高大的嗜氮本土植物物种数量减少有关,这些植物是河岸栖息地蜗牛的营养丰富食物来源。库页虎杖在三种虎杖中对蜗牛的负面影响最强,这反映了它们在冠层结构、微生境湿度和凋落物分解方面的差异。根据对蜗牛群落影响的强度对虎杖类群的排名与先前研究中已知的入侵性排名不同。这表明入侵性并不简单地等同于入侵影响,保护和管理当局需要牢记这一点。