Economic use of plants is key to their naturalization success

Mark Van Kleunen, Xinyi Xu, Qiang Yang, Noelie Maurel, Zhijie Zhang, Wayne Dawson, Franz Essl, Holger Kreft, Jan Pergl, Petr Pysek, Patrick Weigelt, Dietmar Moser, Bernd Lenzner, Trevor Fristoe

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Humans cultivate thousands of economic plants (i.e. plants with economic value) outside their native ranges. To analyze how this contributes to naturalization success, we combine global databases on economic uses and naturalization success of the world's seed plants. Here we show that naturalization likelihood is 18 times higher for economic than non-economic plants. Naturalization success is highest for plants grown as animal food or for environmental uses (e.g. ornamentals), and increases with number of uses. Taxa from the Northern Hemisphere are disproportionately over-represented among economic plants, and economic plants from Asia have the greatest naturalization success. In regional naturalized floras, the percentage of economic plants exceeds the global percentage and increases towards the equator. Phylogenetic patterns in the naturalized flora partly result from phylogenetic patterns in the plants we cultivate. Our study illustrates that accounting for the intentional introduction of economic plants is key to unravelling drivers of plant naturalization.

Original languageEnglish
Article number3201
Number of pages12
JournalNature Communications
Volume11
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24 Jun 2020

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 106003 Biodiversity research

Keywords

  • ALIEN FLORA
  • FRAMEWORK
  • HISTORY
  • INTRODUCTIONS
  • INVASION
  • PATTERNS
  • SPECIES-DIVERSITY
  • WORLD

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