Synergistic Effects of Microenvironmental Heterogeneity and Propagule Pressure Drive the Adaptive Expansion of a Wetland Invasive Plant in an Arid Region
Shengtianzi Dong, Wenxuan Zhao, Tiantian Qin, Hongyang Chen, Wenchao Guo, Hanyue Wang, Hegan Dong

TL;DR
This study shows how giant ragweed survives in a dry region by using small wet spots and high seed numbers, despite being a wetland plant.
Contribution
The study reveals the synergistic role of microhabitat refugia and propagule pressure in enabling invasion in climatically unsuitable regions.
Findings
Lower slope positions maintain higher soil moisture, aiding seedling establishment in arid conditions.
High propagule pressure compensates for suboptimal moisture, enhancing invasion success.
Seed performance varies by collection year, indicating potential population-level adaptation during invasion.
Abstract
Understanding how invasive species establish in environments outside their typical climatic range is crucial for predicting and managing biological invasions. This study experimentally assessed the survival mechanisms of giant ragweed ( Ambrosia trifida L.), a wetland plant, in the arid Yili Valley of Northwest China—a region with climatic conditions markedly different from its known distribution. Using comprehensive niche analysis methods (PCA and kernel density estimation), we confirmed that the Yili Valley represents a novel climatic space for this species, with mean annual precipitation (200 mm) far below its typical requirements (> 800 mm). Field experiments demonstrated that topographically driven moisture accumulation creates critical microhabitat refugia, with lower slope positions maintaining significantly higher soil moisture than middle and upper slopes throughout the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEcology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies · Coastal wetland ecosystem dynamics · Plant Parasitism and Resistance
