Ag Data Commons
Browse

Data from: Invasion away from roadsides was not driven by adaptation to grassland habitats in Dittrichia graveolens (stinkwort)

dataset
posted on 2025-12-08, 22:52 authored by Miranda MelenMiranda Melen, Emma Snyder, Michael Fernandez, Nicky Lustenhouwer, Ingrid ParkerIngrid Parker
<p dir="ltr">Invasive plants along transportation corridors can significantly threaten ecosystems and biodiversity if they spread beyond anthropogenic environments. Rapid evolution may increase the ability of invading plant populations to establish in resident plant communities over time, posing a challenge to invasion risk assessment. We tested for adaptive differentiation in <i>Dittrichia graveolens</i><i> </i>(stinkwort), an invasive species of ruderal habitat in California that is increasingly spreading away from roadsides into more established vegetation. We collected seeds from eight pairs of vegetated sites and their nearest (presumed progenitor) roadside population. We assessed differentiation between populations in roadside and vegetated habitat for germination behavior and for response to competition in a greenhouse experiment. We also tested for increased performance in vegetated habitat with a grassland field experiment including a neighbor removal treatment. Germination rates were slightly reduced in seeds from vegetated sites, which may indicate lower seed viability. Otherwise, plants did not show consistent differences between the two habitat types. Competition strongly reduced performance of <i>D. graveolens</i> in both the greenhouse and in the field, but plants originating from vegetated sites did not show enhanced competitive ability. Our findings show no evidence of adaptive differentiation between <i>D. graveolens</i> populations from roadside and vegetated habitats to date, suggesting that invasiveness in grasslands has not been enhanced by rapid evolution in the 40+ years since this species was introduced to California. Evolutionary constraints or potentially high levels of gene flow at this small scale may limit adaptation to novel habitats along roadsides.</p>

Funding

Evolutionary drivers of invasion in Dittrichia graveolens, a high-risk noxious weed

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Find out more...

Swiss National Science Foundation: P2EZP3_178481

Natural Environment Research Council: EP/X023362/1

History

Data contact name

Melen, Miranda, K.

Data contact email

mkmelen@ucsc.edu

Publisher

Dryad

Temporal Extent Start Date

2021-01-01

Theme

  • Non-geospatial

Geographic Coverage

Geographic location - description

County of Santa Clara (37.36° N 121.97° W) California.

ISO Topic Category

  • environment

National Agricultural Library Thesaurus terms

roadsides; grasslands; habitats; Dittrichia graveolens; invasive species; plants (botany); transportation; ecosystems; biodiversity; evolution; plant communities; risk assessment; California; seeds; germination; greenhouse experimentation; field experimentation; viability; greenhouses; gene flow

OMB Bureau Code

  • 005:20 - National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Pending citation

  • No

Public Access Level

  • Public

Preferred dataset citation

Melen, Miranda; Snyder, Emma; Fernandez, Michael et al. (2024). Invasion away from roadsides was not driven by adaptation to grassland habitats in Dittrichia graveolens (stinkwort) [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.wdbrv15wz

Usage metrics

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC