Pine invasions in the southern hemisphere: modelling interactions between organism, environment and disturbance
Authored by SI Higgins, DM Richardson
Date Published: 1998
DOI: 10.1023/a:1009760512895
Sponsors:
Directorate General for Research of the Government of Catalonia
Foundation for Research Development
South Africa World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Current theories of plant invasion have been criticized for their
limited heuristic and predictive value. We explore the heuristic and
predictive potential of a model which explicitly simulates the
mechanisms of plant invasion. The model, a spatially-explicit
individual-based simulation, is applied to the invasion of pine trees
(Pinus spp.; Pinaceae) in three vegetation types in the southern
hemisphere. The model simulates factors which have been invoked as major
determinants of invasive success: plant traits, environmental features
and disturbance level. Results show that interactions between these
determinants of invasive success are at least as important as the main
effects. The complexity of invasions has promoted the belief that many
factors must be invoked to explain invasions. This study shows that by
incorporating interactions and mechanisms into our models we can
potentially reduce the number of factors needed to predict plant
invasions. The importance of interactions, however, means that
predictions about invasions must be context-specific. The search for
all-encompassing rules for invasions is therefore futile. The model
presented here is of heuristic value since it improves our understanding
of invasions, and of management value since it defines the data and
models needed for predicting invasions.
Tags
Dynamics
ecology
California
Spread
Plant-communities
Biological invasions
Invasibility
Annual grassland
Wind
dispersal
Banksia