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      Drowned, buried and carried away: effects of plant traits on the distribution of native and alien species in riparian ecosystems.

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          Abstract

          Riparian vegetation is exposed to stress from inundation and hydraulic disturbance, and is often rich in native and alien plant species. We describe 35 traits that enable plants to cope with riparian conditions. These include traits for tolerating or avoiding anoxia and enabling underwater photosynthesis, traits that confer resistance and resilience to hydraulic disturbance, and attributes that facilitate dispersal, such as floating propagules. This diversity of life-history strategies illustrates that there are many ways of sustaining life in riparian zones, which helps to explain high riparian biodiversity. Using community assembly theory, we examine how adaptations to inundation, disturbance and dispersal shape plant community composition along key environmental gradients, and how human actions have modified communities. Dispersal-related processes seem to explain many patterns, highlighting the influence of regional processes on local species assemblages. Using alien plant invasions like an (uncontrolled) experiment in community assembly, we use an Australian and a global dataset to examine possible causes of high degrees of riparian invasion. We found that high proportions of alien species in the regional species pools have invaded riparian zones, despite not being riparian specialists, and that riparian invaders disperse in more ways, including by water and humans, than species invading other ecosystems.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          New Phytol.
          The New phytologist
          Wiley-Blackwell
          1469-8137
          0028-646X
          Oct 2014
          : 204
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] School of Botany, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Vic., 3010, Australia; Fenner School of Environment and Society, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, 0200, Australia; Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, MN, 55108, USA.
          Article
          10.1111/nph.12951
          25130059
          e284e5b7-a2f8-46b0-8e34-ac19a2f3ecea
          History

          exotic species,flooding regime,functional traits,hydrochory,inundation,non-native species,community assembly,disturbance

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