Road edge effect and elevation patterns of native and alien plants on an oceanic island (Tenerife, Canary Islands)
Date
2014Abstract
We studied road edge effects on floristic composition and richness of alien
and native plants on five zonal ecosystems, following a steep altitudinal gradient from
arid coastal and mid-elevation scrublands, through laurel and pine forests, to summit
scrub, on Tenerife (Canary Islands). We analyzed vegetation within transects running
from the road edge to the core of natural habitats. Alien richness significantly decreased
with distance to road edge for most ecosystems. Native richness also decreased with
increasing road distance for the coastal scrub and pine forest, but increased for the
thermophilous scrub.We found a decrease in both native and alien species richness with
elevation. Our results suggest that road edge effects in alien plant invasion are stronger
in native shrub communities at low elevations than in forests (laurel and Canary Island
pine forest), where aliens were limited to a narrow road edge band. Detrended correspondence
analyses showed that road edge plots were floristically very different from
interior plots and that each ecosystem harboured a specific alien assemblage with few
species present in more than one ecosystem, suggesting a marked species turnover of
roadside alien species across altitudinal belts up to the pine forest. However, at high
elevations, very few aliens invaded roadsides, probably due to harsh environmental
conditions and still relatively low propagule pressure.