作者
Jeffrey M Diez, Ian Dickie, Grant Edwards, Philip E Hulme, Jon J Sullivan, Richard P Duncan
发表日期
2010/7
期刊
Ecology letters
卷号
13
期号
7
页码范围
803-809
出版商
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
简介
Ecology Letters (2010) 13: 803–809
Abstract
The enemy release hypothesis is a common explanation for species invasions, suggesting that introduced species benefit from leaving behind natural enemies in the native range. However, any such advantage may attenuate over time. In this study, we test a prediction of this more dynamic enemy release hypothesis: that non‐native plant species that became established longer ago exhibit stronger negative feedbacks with the soil. Consistent with declining enemy release over time, we found increasingly negative soil feedbacks for species established longer ago in New Zealand. Negative soil feedbacks were also stronger for more widespread species, but weaker for more locally abundant species, suggesting that species accumulate negative interactions as they spread and can be locally regulated by these interactions. We also present data to support the common …
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