The role of eco-evolutionary experience in invasion success

  • Invasion ecology has made considerable progress in identifying specific mechanisms that potentially determine success and failure of biological invasions. Increasingly, efforts are being made to interrelate or even synthesize the growing number of hypotheses in order to gain a more comprehensive and integrative understanding of invasions. We argue that adopting an eco-evolutionary perspective on invasions is a promising approach to achieve such integration. It emphasizes the evolutionary antecedents of invasions, i.e. the species’ evolutionary legacy and its role in shaping novel biotic interactions that arise due to invasions. We present a conceptual framework consisting of five hypothetical scenarios about the influence of so-called ‘eco-evolutionary experience’ in resident native and invading non-native species on invasion success, depending on the type of ecological interaction (predation, competition, mutualism, and commensalism). We show that several major ecological invasion hypotheses, including ‘enemy release’, ‘EICA’, ‘novel weapons’, ‘naive prey’, ‘new associations’, ‘missed mutualisms’ and ‘Darwin’s naturalization hypothesis’ can be integrated into this framework by uncovering their shared implicit reference to the concept of eco-evolutionary experience. We draft a routine for the assessment of eco-evolutionary experience in native and non-native species using a food web-based example and propose two indices (xpFocal index and xpResidents index) for the actual quantification of eco-evolutionary experience. Our study emphasizes the explanatory potential of an eco-evolutionary perspective on biological invasions.

Export metadata

Additional Services

Share in Twitter Search Google Scholar
Metadaten
Author:Wolf-Christian Saul, Jonathan M. JeschkeORCiDGND, Tina Heger
URN:urn:nbn:de:hebis:30:3-323819
DOI:https://doi.org/10.3897/neobiota.17.5208
Parent Title (English):NeoBiota
Document Type:Article
Language:English
Date of Publication (online):2013/11/21
Date of first Publication:2013/06/28
Publishing Institution:Universitätsbibliothek Johann Christian Senckenberg
Release Date:2013/11/21
Tag:Alien species; ecological novelty; ecological similarity; introduced species; invasibility; invasiveness; naïveté; non-indigenous species
Issue:17
Page Number:18
First Page:57
Last Page:74
HeBIS-PPN:363175857
Dewey Decimal Classification:5 Naturwissenschaften und Mathematik / 57 Biowissenschaften; Biologie / 570 Biowissenschaften; Biologie
Sammlungen:Sammlung Biologie / Sondersammelgebiets-Volltexte
Zeitschriften / Jahresberichte:NeoBiota / NeoBiota 17
:urn:nbn:de:hebis:30:3-321118
Licence (German):License LogoCreative Commons - Namensnennung 3.0