A simulation model of plant invasion: long-distance dispersal determines the pattern of spread
Authored by Eckart Winkler, Nana Nehrbass, Jana Mullerova, Jan Pergl, Petr Pysek, Irena Perglova
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1007/s10530-006-9040-6
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Mechanisms and consequences of biological invasions are a global issue.
Yet, one of the key aspects, the initial phase of invasion, is rarely
observed in detail. Data from aerial photographs covering the spread of
Heracleum mantegazzianum (Apiaceae, native to Caucasus) on a local scale
of hectares in the Czech Republic from the beginning of invasion were
used as an input for an individual-based model (IBM), based on
small-scale and short-time data. To capture the population development
inferred from the photographs, long-distance seed dispersal, changes in
landscape structures and suitability of landscape elements to invasion
by H. mantegazzianum were implemented in the model. The model was used
to address (1) the role of long-distance dispersal in regional invasion
dynamics, and (2) the effect of land-use changes on the progress of the
invasion. Simulations showed that already small fractions of seed
subjected to long-distance dispersal, as determined by systematic
comparison of field data and modelling results, had an over-proportional
effect on the spread of this species. The effect of land-use changes on
the simulated course of invasion depends on the actual level of habitat
saturation; it is larger for populations covering a high proportion of
available habitat area than for those in the initial phase of invasion.
Our results indicate how empirical field data and model outputs can be
linked more closely with each other to improve the understanding of
invasion dynamics. The multi-level, but nevertheless simple structure of
our model suggests that it can be used for studying the spread of
similar species invading in comparable landscapes.
Tags
Management
Biodiversity
ecology
perspective
Habitats
Rates
Population-dynamics
Europe
Species heracleum-mantegazzianum
Alien plant