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Tom
Albright
Advisor: Monica Turner
Ph.D, 2007. Invasive
Plant Distributions: Lessons from native and exotic ranges
Invasive exotic plants are both symptoms and agents of global change,
having diverse effects on ecological and economic systems. The
roles of propagule pressure and ecosystem invasibility are key
in understanding the mechanisms of biotic invasion and the factors
that determine invasion success. In this dissertation, I
use spatial distribution and environmental data to make inferences
about the ecological niche and current and potential distributions
of invasive plants. Chapter one focuses on the analysis of spatial
data in biogeographic studies, such as used in the balance of the
dissertation. This chapter illustrates numerous ways that
spatial heterogeneity can be a rich source of information yielding
insights on important ecological processes. In chapter two,
I examine the role of various biotic, abiotic, human, and historic
factors measured at a variety of spatial scales in shaping the
distribution of Celastrus orbiculatus Thunb. (Asiatic
bittersweet), an exotic invasive vine, in the Southern Appalachians
of Tennessee (TN) and North Carolina (NC), USA. This chapter
demonstrates the important legacy of introduction sites in shaping
the distribution of exotic plants many years after their introduction. Finally,
in the third chapter, I identify and compare the ecological niche
and distribution of an invasive tree, Ailanthus altissima (P.
Mill.) Swingle (tree-of-heaven) in both its native Chinese range
and introduced range in the US and predict its potential US distribution
based on Chinese occurrence data. The predicted distribution is
compared with actual US occurrence information and found to indicate
a broadening of the ecological niche in the introduced range. Collectively
these chapters illustrate the relative importance of factors related
to the ecological niche and propagule pressure in determining the
distribution of invasive species in their native and exotic ranges
and suggest evolutionary and ecological hypotheses related to the
invasion process.
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