Journal article
Disentangling the four demographic dimensions of species invasiveness
JA Catford, JB Baumgartner, PA Vesk, M White, YM Buckley, MA McCarthy
Journal of Ecology | WILEY | Published : 2016
Abstract
A definitive list of invasive species traits remains elusive, perhaps due to inconsistent ways of identifying invasive species. Invasive species are typically identified using one or more of four demographic criteria (local abundance, geographic range, environmental range, spread rate), referred to here as the demographic dimensions of invasiveness. In 112 studies comparing invasive and non-invasive plant traits, all 15 combinations of the four demographic dimensions were used to identify invasive species; 22% of studies identified invasive species solely by high abundance, while 25% ignored abundance. We used demographic data of 340 alien herbs classified as invasive or non-invasive in Vict..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
We thank Sarah DeVries for helping classify definitions from the 112 studies, Aaron Dodd for discussions about invasive species listing in Victoria, Clive Hilliker for help with the presentation of Fig. 1, and Mark Burgman, John Wilson, Gordon Fox, an anonymous referee and the editors for feedback on previous versions of the manuscript. Funding was provided by the Australian Research Council (DE120102221 to J.A.C.) and the ARC Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions.