Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.1274
Title: A phylogenetic analysis of the British flora sheds light on the evolutionary and ecological factors driving plant invasions
Authors: Lim, Junying 
Crawley, Mick J
De Vere, Natasha
Rich, Tim
Savolainen, Vincent
Keywords: Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Ecology
Evolutionary Biology
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
British flora
Darwin's naturalization hypothesis
Ellenberg indicators
functional trait
invasive species
molecular phylogenetics
DARWINS NATURALIZATION HYPOTHESIS
ALIEN PLANTS
PROPAGULE PRESSURE
DIVERGENCE TIMES
ENEMY RELEASE
COMMUNITIES
SCALE
INVASIVENESS
RELATEDNESS
ABSENCE
Issue Date: 1-Nov-2014
Publisher: WILEY
Citation: Lim, Junying, Crawley, Mick J, De Vere, Natasha, Rich, Tim, Savolainen, Vincent (2014-11-01). A phylogenetic analysis of the British flora sheds light on the evolutionary and ecological factors driving plant invasions. ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION 4 (22) : 4258-4269. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.1274
Abstract: Summary: Darwin's naturalization hypothesis predicts that invasive species should perform better in their novel range in the absence of close relatives in the native flora due to reduced competition. Evidence from recent taxonomic and phylogenetic-based studies, however, is equivocal. We test Darwin's naturalization hypothesis at two different spatial scales using a fossil-dated molecular phylogenetic tree of the British native and alien flora (ca. 1600 species) and extensive, fine-scale survey data from the 1998 Countryside Survey. At both landscape and local scales, invasive species were neither significantly more nor less related to the native flora than their non-invasive alien counterparts. Species invasiveness was instead correlated with higher nitrogen and moisture preference, but not other life history traits such as life-form and height. We argue that invasive species spread in Britain is hence more likely determined by changes in land use and other anthropogenic factors, rather than evolutionary history. Synthesis. The transition from non-invasive to invasive is not related to phylogenetic distinctiveness to the native community, but instead to their environmental preferences. Therefore, combating biological invasions in the Britain and other industrialized countries need entirely different strategies than in more natural environments.
Source Title: ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/227736
ISSN: 20457758
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.1274
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