Published August 20, 2012 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Life Form and Life History Explain Variation in Population Processes in a Grassland Community Invaded by Exotic Plants and Mammals

  • 1. University of Chicago

Description

The existence of general characteristics of plant invasiveness is still debated. One reason we may not have found these characteristics is because we do not yet understand how processes underlying population dynamics contribute to community composition in invaded communities. Here I modify Ricker stock-recruitment models to parameterize processes important to community dynamics in an invaded grassland community: immigration, maximum intrinsic growth rate, self-regulation, and limitation by other species. I then used the parameterized models in a multi-species stochastic simulation to determine how processes affected long-term community dynamics. By parameterizing the models using the frequency of the 18 most common species in the grassland, I determined that life history and life form are stronger predictors of underlying processes than is native status. Immigration maintains exotic annual grasses and the dominant native perennial grass in the community. Growth rate maintains other perennial species. While the model mirrors the frequency of native species well, exotic species have lower observed than parameterized frequencies, suggesting that they are not reaching their potential frequency. These results, combined with results from past research, suggest that disturbance may be key to maintaining exotic species in the community. Here I showed that a continuous modified Ricker model fit discrete grassland frequency data well. This allowed me to model the dominant species in the community simultaneously and gain insight into the processes that determine community composition.

Files

journal.pone.0042906.pdf

Files (11.6 MB)

Name Size Download all
Article
md5:bd4fa90f7d588a93faecdcb4dab0e2c1
468.3 kB Preview Download
md5:a90e48837a8c8e09eb12b4897730a3c0
11.1 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0042906
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10611

Funding

U.S. National Science Foundation
Minority Postdoctoral Fellowship
U.S. National Science Foundation
Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant
U.S. National Science Foundation
Dissertation Enhancement Grant
U.S. National Science Foundation
Graduate Research Fellowship
U.S. National Science Foundation
011780
U.S. National Science Foundation
10456110
U.S. National Science Foundation
0452687
U.S. National Science Foundation
0708462
Achievement Rewards for College Scientists Foundation
University of Chicago
Hinds Fund
Sigma Xi
Rotary International
Southeast Chicago Rotary Club
Unknown funder
personal funds

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Evolutionary Biology