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Synergy between roads and disturbance favour Bromus tectorum L. invasion

BACKGROUND: Global change produces pervasive negative impacts on biodiversity worldwide. Land use change and biological invasions are two of the major drivers of global change that often coexist; however, the effects of their interaction on natural habitats have been little investigated. In particul...

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Autores principales: Speziale, Karina L., di Virgilio, Agustina, Lescano, Maria N., Pirk, Gabriela, Franzese, Jorgelina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6120438/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30186695
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5529
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author Speziale, Karina L.
di Virgilio, Agustina
Lescano, Maria N.
Pirk, Gabriela
Franzese, Jorgelina
author_facet Speziale, Karina L.
di Virgilio, Agustina
Lescano, Maria N.
Pirk, Gabriela
Franzese, Jorgelina
author_sort Speziale, Karina L.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Global change produces pervasive negative impacts on biodiversity worldwide. Land use change and biological invasions are two of the major drivers of global change that often coexist; however, the effects of their interaction on natural habitats have been little investigated. In particular, we aimed to analyse whether the invasion of an introduced grass (Bromus tectorum; cheatgrass) along roads verges and the disturbance level in the natural surrounding habitat interact to influence the degree of B. tectorum invasion in the latter habitats in north-western Patagonia. METHODS: Along six different roads, totalling approximately 370 km, we set two 50 m × 2 m sampling plots every 5 km (73 plots in total). One plot was placed parallel to the road (on the roadside) and the other one perpendicular to it, towards the interior of the natural surrounding habitat. In each plot, we estimated the B. tectorum plant density in 1 m(2) subplots placed every 5 m. In the natural habitat, we registered the vegetation type (grassy steppe, shrub-steppe, shrubland, and wet-meadow) and the disturbance level (low, intermediate, and high). Disturbance level was visually categorized according to different signs of habitat degradation by anthropogenic use. RESULTS: B. tectorum density showed an exponential decay from roadsides towards the interior of natural habitats. The degree of B. tectorum invasion inside natural habitats was positively related to B. tectorum density on roadsides only when the disturbance level was low. Shrub-steppes, grassy steppes and shrublands showed similar mean density of B. tectorum. Wet-meadows had the lowest densities of B. tectorum. Intermediate and highly disturbed environments presented higher B. tectorum density than those areas with low disturbance. DISCUSSION: Our study highlights the importance of the interaction between road verges and disturbance levels on B. tectorum invasion in natural habitats surrounding roads of north-western Patagonia, particularly evidencing its significance in the invasion onset. The importance of invasion in road verges depends on disturbance level, with better conserved environments being more resistant to invasion at low levels of B. tectorum density along road verges, but more susceptible to road verges invasion at higher levels of disturbance. All the habitats except wet-meadows were invaded at a similar degree by B. tectorum, which reflects its adaptability to multiple habitat conditions. Overall, our work showed that synergies among global change drivers impact native environments favouring the invasion of B. tectorum.
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spelling pubmed-61204382018-09-05 Synergy between roads and disturbance favour Bromus tectorum L. invasion Speziale, Karina L. di Virgilio, Agustina Lescano, Maria N. Pirk, Gabriela Franzese, Jorgelina PeerJ Natural Resource Management BACKGROUND: Global change produces pervasive negative impacts on biodiversity worldwide. Land use change and biological invasions are two of the major drivers of global change that often coexist; however, the effects of their interaction on natural habitats have been little investigated. In particular, we aimed to analyse whether the invasion of an introduced grass (Bromus tectorum; cheatgrass) along roads verges and the disturbance level in the natural surrounding habitat interact to influence the degree of B. tectorum invasion in the latter habitats in north-western Patagonia. METHODS: Along six different roads, totalling approximately 370 km, we set two 50 m × 2 m sampling plots every 5 km (73 plots in total). One plot was placed parallel to the road (on the roadside) and the other one perpendicular to it, towards the interior of the natural surrounding habitat. In each plot, we estimated the B. tectorum plant density in 1 m(2) subplots placed every 5 m. In the natural habitat, we registered the vegetation type (grassy steppe, shrub-steppe, shrubland, and wet-meadow) and the disturbance level (low, intermediate, and high). Disturbance level was visually categorized according to different signs of habitat degradation by anthropogenic use. RESULTS: B. tectorum density showed an exponential decay from roadsides towards the interior of natural habitats. The degree of B. tectorum invasion inside natural habitats was positively related to B. tectorum density on roadsides only when the disturbance level was low. Shrub-steppes, grassy steppes and shrublands showed similar mean density of B. tectorum. Wet-meadows had the lowest densities of B. tectorum. Intermediate and highly disturbed environments presented higher B. tectorum density than those areas with low disturbance. DISCUSSION: Our study highlights the importance of the interaction between road verges and disturbance levels on B. tectorum invasion in natural habitats surrounding roads of north-western Patagonia, particularly evidencing its significance in the invasion onset. The importance of invasion in road verges depends on disturbance level, with better conserved environments being more resistant to invasion at low levels of B. tectorum density along road verges, but more susceptible to road verges invasion at higher levels of disturbance. All the habitats except wet-meadows were invaded at a similar degree by B. tectorum, which reflects its adaptability to multiple habitat conditions. Overall, our work showed that synergies among global change drivers impact native environments favouring the invasion of B. tectorum. PeerJ Inc. 2018-08-31 /pmc/articles/PMC6120438/ /pubmed/30186695 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5529 Text en ©2018 Speziale et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Natural Resource Management
Speziale, Karina L.
di Virgilio, Agustina
Lescano, Maria N.
Pirk, Gabriela
Franzese, Jorgelina
Synergy between roads and disturbance favour Bromus tectorum L. invasion
title Synergy between roads and disturbance favour Bromus tectorum L. invasion
title_full Synergy between roads and disturbance favour Bromus tectorum L. invasion
title_fullStr Synergy between roads and disturbance favour Bromus tectorum L. invasion
title_full_unstemmed Synergy between roads and disturbance favour Bromus tectorum L. invasion
title_short Synergy between roads and disturbance favour Bromus tectorum L. invasion
title_sort synergy between roads and disturbance favour bromus tectorum l. invasion
topic Natural Resource Management
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6120438/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30186695
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5529
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