作者
Lin Jiang, Jiaqi Tan, Zhichao Pu
发表日期
2010/4
期刊
The American Naturalist
卷号
175
期号
4
页码范围
415-423
出版商
The University of Chicago Press
简介
One of the oldest ideas in invasion biology, known as Darwin’s naturalization hypothesis, suggests that introduced species are more successful in communities in which their close relatives are absent. We conducted the first experimental test of this hypothesis in laboratory bacterial communities varying in phylogenetic relatedness between resident and invading species with and without a protist bacterivore. As predicted, invasion success increased with phylogenetic distance between the invading and the resident bacterial species in both the presence and the absence of protistan bacterivory. The frequency of successful invader establishment was best explained by average phylogenetic distance between the invader and all resident species, possibly indicating limitation by the availability of the unexploited niche (i.e., organic substances in the medium capable of supporting the invader growth); invader …
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