Declines in a ground-dwelling arthropod community during an invasion by Sahara mustard (Brassica tournefortii) in aeolian sand habitats

被引:0
|
作者
Heather L. Hulton VanTassel
Anne M. Hansen
Cameron W. Barrows
Quresh Latif
Margaret W. Simon
Kurt E. Anderson
机构
[1] University of California,Department of Biology
[2] Riverside,Department of Statistics
[3] University of California,Center for Conservation Biology
[4] Riverside,Rocky Mountain Research Station
[5] University of California,Department of Biology
[6] Riverside,undefined
[7] U.S. Forest Service,undefined
[8] University of California,undefined
[9] Los Angeles,undefined
来源
Biological Invasions | 2014年 / 16卷
关键词
Community structure; Arid environments; Invasive species impacts; Bottom-up effects; Aeolian sand dunes;
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学科分类号
摘要
Sahara Mustard (Brassica tournefortii; hereafter mustard), an exotic plant species, has invaded habitats throughout the arid southwestern United States. Mustard has reached high densities across aeolian sand habitats of southwestern deserts, including five distinct sand habitats in the eastern Coachella Valley, California. We examined trends in ground-dwelling arthropod community structure concurrent with mustard invasion in 90 plots within those habitats from 2003 to 2011 (n = 773 plot·years). We expected arthropod communities to respond negatively to mustard invasion because previous work documented significant negative impacts of mustard on diversity and biomass of native plants, the primary resource base for many of the arthropods. Arthropod abundance and species richness declined during the study period while mustard cover increased, and arthropod metrics were negatively related to mustard cover across all plots. When controlling for non-target environmental correlates (e.g. perennial frequency and precipitation) and for potential factors that we suspected of mediating mustard effects (e.g. native cover and sand compaction), negative relationships with mustard remained statistically supported. Nevertheless, arthropod richness’s relationship decreased slightly in strength and significance suggesting that mechanistic pathways may be both direct (via habitat structure) and indirect (via native cover suppression and sand compaction). However, mechanistic pathways for mustard effects, particularly on arthropod abundance, remain unclear. Most arthropod taxa, including most detritivores, decreased through time and were negatively related to mustard cover. In contrast, many predators were positively related to mustard. In total, our study provides substantial evidence for a negative effect of Sahara mustard on the structure of a ground-dwelling arthropod community.
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页码:1675 / 1687
页数:12
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