May 2, 2025 (Politics & Government Daily) –
2025 MAY 01 (NewsRx) -- By a
The researchers included more than 5 million measurements from individual trees across much of eastern
This might seem like a no-brainer. If you increase the number of non-native species, it makes sense that the number of natives would go down. But no one’s actually demonstrated that this happens at a large scale before.
“There’s this assumption that introduced species are not a good thing, but we don’t always know what that means,” said study co-author
There are numerous studies that catalogue the negative effects plants can have when they’re introduced to a novel ecosystem. Without the pressures of pathogens and herbivores in the region where they evolved, they can quickly outcompete native species, change the pH of the soil, alter the growth and behavior of animals, disrupt the flow of nutrients from tree to tree through underground fungal networks, and make it easier for some species to move into an area while pushing others out by altering the environment.
What we don’t know is how all of these changes affect native plant diversity as a whole.
To find out, the study authors left no stone unturned. Like a physician subjecting a patient to a barrage of clinical tests, they looked at changes in biological diversity over time in response to the arrival and establishment of non-native species.
Using data collected as far back as 1995, the authors found two conspicuous patterns. First, introduced species are picking up speed rather than losing steam. Second, in areas with introduced species, the number of native species is decreasing over time.
The diversity of introduced species in many areas is also increasing. This could be because certain areas are more amenable to the growth of non-natives; they could be close to metropolitan or suburban areas, for example, where exotic trees are grown as ornamentals. Or it could mean the arrival of one introduced species somehow makes way for others.
“We don’t actually know the mechanism behind the increase,” said lead author
The answer to that riddle will have to await further research. Despite a solid understanding of how introduced trees affect natives, the authors say they aren’t any closer to finding a solution for the problem. The study of introduced species is primarily focused on mitigation and prevention rather than the full-scale restoration of ecosystems. Once Pandora’s box has been opened, it’s practically impossible to corral the furies.
“We can’t eradicate species once they’ve become widespread,” Liu said.
But studies like these are valuable nonetheless for the simple reason that a problem can’t be solved unless it’s first identified. Large-scale and long-term datasets like the Forest Inventory and Analysis Program of the
“What we can offer is a risk map,” Yunpeng said. “We can tell people which region or ecosystem they should pay more attention to in the future.”
Case study: Tallow tree, “a most useful plant.”
Tallow trees (Triadica sebifera) have spade-shaped leaves with much of the same visual appeal as a gaudy flower. In spring, the new leaves grow out crimson and give way to kelly green as they mature. Near the end of the growing season, the leaves are flushed with anthocyanins that turn them ruby red with bronze veins and a halo of dappled sunset yellows.
They have actual flowers, too, which hang down in long racemes that look like elephant trunks attached to the tip of each branch. When the fruit is ready for dispersal, an outer woody layer splits and falls away, revealing three seeds coated in a thick, waxy layer of tallow that can be harvested to make candles and soap.
The seeds also contain a type of oil that hardens when exposed to air. Unlike water, oils don’t evaporate but instead go through a process called polymerization, a chemical transformation that results in a solid. Tallow tree oils polymerize quickly, making them useful for oil-based paints and varnishes.
The tree, which can grow up to 50 feet tall, also has an elegant profile, with a wide, flowing canopy that looks like it was draped in a sheet of leaves rather than growing them itself.
Tallow trees are native to
Franklin shipped the seeds to a man in
Tallow trees are now considered one of the most invasive plant species in
Many birds eat tallow tree fruit and disperse the seeds, making it easy for the plant to escape cultivation and infiltrate natural areas, where it can radically and rapidly alter ecosystems.
A stark example of this comes from
Before
But this didn’t stop tallow trees. After building up a robust seed bank in the nearby riparian zones, they quickly and efficiently went about converting prairies into woodlands made primarily of tallow trees. They’re also good at taking over dormant pastures, and their spread was likely facilitated by abandoned farm and ranch lands, which lay fallow as agriculture declined in the region and properties were earmarked for development.
Once invasive species become established, they also make subtle changes to the environment that scientists are only now beginning to understand.
Tallow leaves are relatively thin compared with some native trees in temperate North American forests. If they happen to fall in a body of water, such as a pond or a lake, bacteria rapidly begin breaking down the leaves, digesting their sugars and tannins, and using up dissolved oxygen in the water during the process.
This has been shown to reduce the hatching success and tadpole survival of southern leopard frogs in laboratory settings. Gray tree frogs also seem to avoid making mating calls in tallow trees, preferring the natives instead, which would become problematic in places where tallows are the main type of woody vegetation.
Replacing an entire ecosystem, whether through development or the introduction of non-native species, also displaces organisms that cannot withstand the transition. This is the case for Attwater’s prairie-chicken, which is listed as federally endangered and lives exclusively in the disappearing coastal plains of
The study was published in the Proceedings of the
Funding for the study was provided in part by the
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