What shapes giant hogweed invasion? Answers from a spatio-temporal model integrating multiscale monitoring data

Moenickes S, Thiele J

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

In this study we simulated the invasion of Heracleum mantegazzianum with a spatiotemporal model that combined a life-cycle matrix model with mechanistic local and corridor dispersal and a stochastic long-distance dispersal in a cellular automaton. The model was applied to the habitat configuration and invader distribution of eight 1 km2 study areas. Comparing the simulations with monitoring data collected over 7 years (2002-2009) yielded a modelling efficiency of 0.94. We tested the significance of different mechanisms of invasion by omitting or modifying single model components one at a time. Thus we found that the extent of H. mantegazzianum invasion at landscape level depends on both landscape-scale processes and local processes which control recruitment success and population density. Limiting recruitment success (100 ? 30 %) and successionally decreasing the carrying capacity of habitats (max ? 0) over 30 years significantly improved the projections of the invasion at the landscape level. Local dispersal reached farther than 10 m, i.e. farther than previously assumed, but appeared to be unaffected by wind directions. Long-distance dispersal togetherwith local dispersal dominated the invasion quantitatively. Dispersal through corridors accounted for less invasive spread. Its importance, with respect to invasion speed (number of colonised model grid cells) is probably limited over short periods of time (7 years). Only dispersal along rivers made a significant quantitative contribution to invasion of H. mantegazzianum. We suggest that biotic heterogeneity of suitable habitats is responsible for varying invasion success and that successionally increasing competition leads to declining population densities of H. mantegazzianum over several decades slowing down the spread on the landscape scale.

Details about the publication

JournalBiological Invasions
Volume15
Issue1
Page range61-73
StatusPublished
Release year2012 (14/07/2012)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
Keywordsdispersal vector; Heracleum mantegazzianum; matrix model;  patch-corridor-matrix mosaic; recruitment; succession

Authors from the University of Münster

Thiele, Jan

Projects the publication originates from

Duration: since 01/01/2010
Type of project: Own resources project