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Non-native plantations: Plant invasion hotspots to multispecies bridgeheads.

Li X, Simberloff D, Huang W

Invasive Species

That eucalyptus grove or pine plantation at the edge of your local nature reserve may be quietly seeding a wave of invasive plants into the native habitat you walk through.

When trees from other countries are planted in large groups, they create ideal conditions for other non-native plants to move in and thrive. Over time, these plantations can become hubs that send invasive species spreading outward into wild lands nearby. It's like a beachhead invasion — the plantation isn't just a problem itself, it becomes a source spreading trouble to the wider landscape.

Key Findings

1

Non-native tree plantations function as 'bridgeheads' — staging grounds from which multiple invasive plant species spread into surrounding native ecosystems

2

Plantations support higher densities and diversity of invasive understory plants compared to native forests, amplifying the regional invasion risk

3

The effect is not limited to one invader: plantations simultaneously facilitate multiple non-native species, compounding ecological impact

chevron_right Technical Summary

Non-native tree plantations — often planted for timber or carbon sequestration — can act as launching pads for invasive plant species, allowing them to spread far beyond the plantation into surrounding natural areas.

hub This connects to 10 other discoveries — invasive-species, urban-ecology, native-plants +2 more 5 related articles

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