(RRF-2.3.1-21-2022-00006) Támogató: Egészségbiztonság Nemzeti Laboratórium
(FK 123813) Támogató: NKFIH
Safeguarding European wild pollinators(No. 101003476) Támogató: Horizon 2020
(KKP 144068) Támogató: NKFIH
Ornamental plants constitute a major source of invasive species. Gaillardia aristata
(great blanketflower) is planted worldwide and its escape has been reported in several
European countries without ecological impact assessment on the invasive potential.
As there is a markedly spreading population with invasive behaviour in Hungary, we
aimed to reveal the distribution, impacts and traits of G. aristata . We gathered
occurrence data outside the gardens in Hungary, based on literature, unpublished observations
by experts and our own records. We investigated the impacts of an extended population,
where the species invaded sandy old-fields within a 25 km 2 area. Here, we compared
the species richness, diversity, community composition and height of invaded and uninvaded
vegetation. Furthermore, we evaluated the traits potentially associated with the invasiveness
of G. aristata in comparison with other herbaceous invasive species in the region.
We found that G. aristata occurred mostly by casual escapes, but naturalised and invasive
populations were also detected in considerable numbers. G. aristata usually appeared
close to gardens and ruderal habitats, but also in semi-natural and natural grasslands
and tended to spread better in sandy soils. We found lower plant species richness
and Shannon diversity in the invaded sites and the invasion of G. aristata significantly
influenced the composition of the plant community. The trait analyses revealed that
the invasive potential of G. aristata is backed by a wide germination niche breadth,
extremely long flowering period, small shoot-root ratio (large absorption and gripping
surface), large seeds (longer persistence) and dispersal by epizoochory of grazing
livestock (mostly by sheep), probably helping the species’ survival and spreading
in the disturbed, species-poor, sandy, open habitats. These functional traits, as
well as the ornamental utilisation, may act together with the aridisation of the climate
and the changing land-use practices (e.g. abandoned, disturbed sites) in the success
of G. aristata . We raise awareness of the rapid transition of G. aristata from ornamental
plant to casual alien and then to invasive species in certain environmental conditions
(i.e. sandy soils, species-poor communities, human disturbances), although it seems
to be not a strong ecosystem transformer so far. Nonetheless, banning it from seed
mixtures, developing eradication strategy and long-term monitoring of this species
would be important to halt its spreading in time.