Liu Yunpeng, Scheiner Samuel M, Hogan J Aaron, Thomas Matthew B, Soltis Pamela S, Guralnick Robert P, Soltis Douglas E, Lichstein Jeremy W
Invasion Science Institute, Agronomy Department, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611.
Private address, Arlington, VA 22205.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Apr 29;122(17):e2424908122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2424908122. Epub 2025 Apr 21.
Biological invasions are profoundly altering Earth's ecosystems, but generalities about the effects of nonnative species on the diversity and productivity of native communities have been elusive. This lack of generality may reflect the limited spatial and temporal extents of most previous studies. Using >5 million tree measurements across eastern US forests from 1995 to 2023, we quantified temporal trends in tree diversity and biomass. We then analyzed community-level changes in native tree diversity and biomass in relation to nonnative tree invasion and native species colonization. Across the entire eastern United States, native tree species richness decreased over time in plots where nonnatives occurred, whereas nonnative species richness and the biomass of both natives and nonnatives increased over time. At the community scale, native richness tended to decline following nonnative invasion, whereas native biomass and richness-independent measures of trait and phylogenetic diversity tended to remain stable. These patterns can be explained by the rarity of the displaced native species and their functional and phylogenetic similarity to native species that survived nonnative invasions. In contrast, native survivors tended to be functionally distinct from nonnative invaders, suggesting an important role for niche partitioning in community dynamics. Colonization by previously absent native species was associated with an increase in native richness (beyond the addition of native colonizers), which contrasts with declines in native richness that tended to follow nonnative invasion. These results suggest a causal role for nonnative species in the native richness decline of invaded communities.
生物入侵正在深刻改变地球的生态系统,但关于外来物种对本地群落多样性和生产力影响的一般性结论却难以捉摸。这种缺乏普遍性的情况可能反映了此前大多数研究在空间和时间范围上的局限性。利用1995年至2023年美国东部森林超过500万次树木测量数据,我们量化了树木多样性和生物量的时间趋势。然后,我们分析了本地树木多样性和生物量在群落水平上的变化与外来树木入侵和本地物种定殖的关系。在美国东部全境,在外来物种出现的地块中,本地树种丰富度随时间下降,而外来物种丰富度以及本地和外来物种的生物量均随时间增加。在群落尺度上,外来入侵后本地丰富度往往下降,而本地生物量以及与丰富度无关的性状和系统发育多样性指标往往保持稳定。这些模式可以通过被取代的本地物种的稀有性及其与在非本地入侵中存活下来的本地物种的功能和系统发育相似性来解释。相比之下,本地幸存者在功能上往往与外来入侵者不同,这表明生态位分化在群落动态中发挥着重要作用。以前不存在的本地物种的定殖与本地丰富度的增加(不包括本地定殖者的增加)相关,这与外来入侵后本地丰富度往往下降形成对比。这些结果表明外来物种在入侵群落的本地丰富度下降中起到了因果作用。