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Facilitation cascade drives positive relationship between native biodiversity and invasion success.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Altieri, AH; van Wesenbeeck, BK; Bertness, MD; Silliman, BR
Published in: Ecology
May 2010

The pervasive impact of invasive species has motivated considerable research to understand how characteristics of invaded communities, such as native species diversity, affect the establishment of invasive species. Efforts to identify general mechanisms that limit invasion success, however, have been frustrated by disagreement between landscape-scale observations that generally find a positive relationship between native diversity and invasibility and smaller-scale experiments that consistently reveal competitive interactions that generate the opposite relationship. Here we experimentally elucidate the mechanism explaining the large-scale positive associations between invasion success and native intertidal diversity revealed in our landscape-scale surveys of New England shorelines. Experimental manipulations revealed this large-scale pattern is driven by a facilitation cascade where ecosystem-engineering species interact nonlinearly to enhance native diversity and invasion success by alleviating thermal stress and substrate instability. Our findings reveal that large-scale diversity-invasion relationships can be explained by small-scale positive interactions that commonly occur across multiple trophic levels and functional groups. We argue that facilitation has played an important but unrecognized role in the invasion of other well studied systems, and will be of increasing importance with anticipated climate change.

Duke Scholars

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Published In

Ecology

DOI

EISSN

1939-9170

ISSN

1939-9170

Publication Date

May 2010

Volume

91

Issue

5

Start / End Page

1269 / 1275

Related Subject Headings

  • Rhode Island
  • Poaceae
  • Ecology
  • Conservation of Natural Resources
  • Brachyura
  • Bivalvia
  • Biodiversity
  • Animals
  • 4102 Ecological applications
  • 3109 Zoology
 

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Altieri, A. H., van Wesenbeeck, B. K., Bertness, M. D., & Silliman, B. R. (2010). Facilitation cascade drives positive relationship between native biodiversity and invasion success. Ecology, 91(5), 1269–1275. https://doi.org/10.1890/09-1301.1
Altieri, Andrew H., Bregje K. van Wesenbeeck, Mark D. Bertness, and Brian R. Silliman. “Facilitation cascade drives positive relationship between native biodiversity and invasion success.Ecology 91, no. 5 (May 2010): 1269–75. https://doi.org/10.1890/09-1301.1.
Altieri AH, van Wesenbeeck BK, Bertness MD, Silliman BR. Facilitation cascade drives positive relationship between native biodiversity and invasion success. Ecology. 2010 May;91(5):1269–75.
Altieri, Andrew H., et al. “Facilitation cascade drives positive relationship between native biodiversity and invasion success.Ecology, vol. 91, no. 5, May 2010, pp. 1269–75. Epmc, doi:10.1890/09-1301.1.
Altieri AH, van Wesenbeeck BK, Bertness MD, Silliman BR. Facilitation cascade drives positive relationship between native biodiversity and invasion success. Ecology. 2010 May;91(5):1269–1275.
Journal cover image

Published In

Ecology

DOI

EISSN

1939-9170

ISSN

1939-9170

Publication Date

May 2010

Volume

91

Issue

5

Start / End Page

1269 / 1275

Related Subject Headings

  • Rhode Island
  • Poaceae
  • Ecology
  • Conservation of Natural Resources
  • Brachyura
  • Bivalvia
  • Biodiversity
  • Animals
  • 4102 Ecological applications
  • 3109 Zoology