Cumulative meta-analysis identifies declining but negative impacts of invasive species on richness after 20 yr

被引:34
作者
Crystal-Ornelas, Robert [1 ,2 ]
Lockwood, Julie L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Rutgers State Univ, Sch Environm & Biol Sci, Dept Ecol Evolut & Nat Resources, Coll Farm Rd, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA
[2] Univ San Francisco, Dept Psychol, Kalmanovitz Hall G65,2130 Fulton St, San Francisco, CA 94117 USA
关键词
cumulative meta-analysis; decline effect; evidence synthesis; invasive species; species richness; stability; sufficiency; ECOLOGICAL IMPACTS; PUBLICATION BIAS; RESPONSE RATIOS; TEMPORAL TRENDS; PLANT INVASIONS; COMMUNITIES; DISSEMINATION; EXTINCTION; ECOSYSTEMS; TIME;
D O I
10.1002/ecy.3082
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
A principal impact of invasive species is that they reduce local species richness. However, it is unknown whether the magnitude of the richness decrease has been consistent over the past two decades of published research. We used cumulative meta-analysis to synthesize evidence from 240 articles evaluating whether this cumulative evidence base generally supports, or refutes, the association between invasive species presence and richness declines. First, we determined whether evidence accumulation lowered the mean effect size of invasive species on local native richness through time; termed the "decline effect." Then, as mean effect sizes changed over time, we identified when accumulated evidence reached sufficiency, indicating that the mean effect direction (positive or negative) was unlikely to be reversed by unpublished research. We also assessed whether the mean effect size reached a threshold of stability over publication years. To date, no research has tested mechanisms of the decline effect, and here we determine whether publication bias, sample size, time since invasion, or invader trophic position are driving a decline effect in the published evidence base. We found a clear decline in the cumulative mean effect of invasive species on local native species richness as published evidence accumulated between 1999 and 2016. Despite this decline, an average negative association was stable and sufficiently robust to unpublished studies by 2007, showing a 21% mean richness decrease by 2016. Contrary to our expectation, the decline effect manifested consistently regardless of invasive species trophic position, time since invasion, or journal rank. Within taxonomic subgroups, trees, insects, and herbaceous plants exhibit a decline effect, yet still show sufficient and stable negative impacts on richness. However, many other taxonomic subgroups (e.g., crustaceans, fish, mammals) lack evidence for average negative impacts on richness, or have not met sufficiency or stability thresholds.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 67 条
  • [1] Potential problems of removing one invasive species at a time: a meta-analysis of the interactions between invasive vertebrates and unexpected effects of removal programs
    Ballari, Sebastian A.
    Kuebbing, Sara E.
    Nunez, Martin A.
    [J]. PEERJ, 2016, 4
  • [2] Dissemination biases in ecology: effect sizes matter more than quality
    Barto, E. Kathryn
    Rillig, Matthias C.
    [J]. OIKOS, 2012, 121 (02) : 228 - 235
  • [3] The role of agri-environment schemes in conservation and environmental management
    Batary, Peter
    Dicks, Lynn V.
    Kleijn, David
    Sutherland, William J.
    [J]. CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 2015, 29 (04) : 1006 - 1016
  • [4] Fitting Linear Mixed-Effects Models Using lme4
    Bates, Douglas
    Maechler, Martin
    Bolker, Benjamin M.
    Walker, Steven C.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF STATISTICAL SOFTWARE, 2015, 67 (01): : 1 - 48
  • [5] Avian extinction and mammalian introductions on oceanic islands
    Blackburn, TM
    Cassey, P
    Duncan, RP
    Evans, KL
    Gaston, KJ
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2004, 305 (5692) : 1955 - 1958
  • [6] Disentangling the abundance-impact relationship for invasive species
    Bradley, Bethany A.
    Laginhas, Brittany B.
    Whitlock, Raj
    Allen, Jenica M.
    Bates, Amanda E.
    Bernatchez, Genevieve
    Diez, Jeffrey M.
    Early, Regan
    Lenoir, Jonathan
    Vila, Montserrat
    Sorte, Cascade J. B.
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2019, 116 (20) : 9919 - 9924
  • [7] Global meta-analysis of the impacts of terrestrial invertebrate invaders on species, communities and ecosystems
    Cameron, Erin K.
    Vila, Montserrat
    Cabeza, Mar
    [J]. GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2016, 25 (05): : 596 - 606
  • [8] A meta-analysis of plant facilitation in coastal dune systems: responses, regions, and research gaps
    Castanho, Camila de Toledo
    Lortie, Christopher J.
    Zaitchik, Benjamin
    Prado, Paulo Inacio
    [J]. PEERJ, 2015, 3
  • [9] Invasive species are a leading cause of animal extinctions
    Clavero, M
    García-Berthou, E
    [J]. TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2005, 20 (03) : 110 - 110
  • [10] The 'known unknowns' of invasive species impact measurement
    Crystal-Ornelas, Robert
    Lockwood, Julie L.
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS, 2020, 22 (04) : 1513 - 1525