Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
School of Natural Sciences, University of California, Merced, Merced, California, USA.
Ecol Lett. 2022 Oct;25(10):2132-2141. doi: 10.1111/ele.14081. Epub 2022 Aug 25.
Past and recent studies have focused on the effects of global change drivers such as species invasions on species extinction. However, as we enter the United Nations Decade of Ecosystem Restoration the aim must switch to understanding how invasive-species management affects the persistence of the remaining species in a community. Focusing on plant-pollinator interactions, we test how species persistence is affected by restoration via the removal of invasive plant species. Restoration had a clear positive effect on plant persistence, whereas there was no difference between across treatments for pollinator persistence in the early season, but a clear effect in late season, with higher persistence in unrestored sites. Network structure affected only pollinator persistence, while centrality had a strong positive effect on both plants and pollinators. Our results suggest a hidden effect of invasive plants-although they may compete with native plant species, invasive plants may provide important resources for pollinators, at least in the short term.
过去和最近的研究都集中在全球变化驱动因素(如物种入侵)对物种灭绝的影响上。然而,随着我们进入联合国生态系统恢复十年,目标必须转变为了解入侵物种管理如何影响群落中剩余物种的持久性。我们专注于植物-传粉者相互作用,研究通过去除入侵植物物种来恢复如何影响物种的持久性。恢复对植物的持久性有明显的积极影响,而在早期季节,传粉者的持久性在处理之间没有差异,但在后期季节有明显的影响,未恢复的地点有更高的持久性。网络结构仅影响传粉者的持久性,而中心度对植物和传粉者都有强烈的积极影响。我们的结果表明入侵植物有一个隐藏的影响——尽管它们可能与本地植物物种竞争,但入侵植物至少在短期内可能为传粉者提供重要的资源。