Modeling the impacts of life-history traits, canopy gaps, and establishment location on woodland shrub invasions
Authored by Moira L Zellner, III Basil V Iannone, David H Wise
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1890/13-0833.1
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Pseudocode
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
http://www.esapubs.org/archive/appl/A024/028/suppl-1.php
Abstract
We used an individual-based model to identify how localized patterns of
woodland invasions by exotic shrubs are likely influenced by (1)
observed variation in age at first reproduction and fecundity, (2)
hypothesized effects of canopy gaps on these life-history traits and
dispersal, and (3) initial establishment location. Rates of spread
accelerated nearly twofold as age at first reproduction decreased from
eight to three years or fecundity increased from 3 to 20 offspring per
year, illustrating the need to better understand the factors that
influence these life-history traits. Canopy gaps facilitated spread by
influencing these life-history traits, but not through their effects on
dispersal. Invasions starting at the woodland center spread more rapidly
than do those starting along the woodland edge. These findings suggest
that managers should not only prioritize the removal of shrubs that
reproduce the earliest or produce the most offspring, but they should
also focus on the invasions in woodlands with high canopy openness
and/or that are located in woodland interiors. Investigated factors also
affected other invasion characteristics, often in surprising ways. For
example, those changes in age at first reproduction and fecundity that
increased the rate of spread produced nonparallel patterns of change in
the proportions of invasion reproducing, whether or not invasions
exhibited clumped or scattered spatial arrangements, and invasional lag.
Additionally, canopy gaps influenced these characteristics by increasing
fecundity, but not by decreasing age at first reproduction or altering
dispersal, suggesting that canopy gaps affect local patterns of
exotic-shrub invasions primarily through their positive effects on fruit
production.
Tags
Long-distance dispersal
Rhamnus-cathartica l.
Honeysuckle
lonicera-maackii
Eastern north-america
Amur honeysuckle
Southern
wisconsin
European buckthorn
Plant invasions
New-york
Resource
availability