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Constructing a database of alien plants in the Himalaya to test patterns structuring diversity
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  • Suresh Rana,
  • Bhawana Dangwal,
  • G.S. Rawat,
  • Trevor Price
Suresh Rana
G.B Pant National Institute of Himalayan Environment
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Bhawana Dangwal
G.B Pant National Institute of Himalayan Environment
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G.S. Rawat
Wildlife Institute of India
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Trevor Price
University of Chicago

Corresponding Author:pricet@uchicago.edu

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Abstract

Differences in the number of alien plant species in different locations may reflect climatic and other controls that similarly affect native species and/or propagule pressure accompanied with delayed spread from the point of introduction. We set out to examine these alternatives for Himalayan plants, in a phylogenetic framework. We build a database of alien plant distributions for the Himalaya. Focusing on the well documented regions of Jammu & Kashmir (west) and Bhutan (east) we compare alien and native species for (1) richness patterns, (2) degree of phylogenetic clustering, (3) the extent to which species-poor regions are subsets of species-rich regions, and (4) continental and climatic affinities/source. We document 1,470 alien species (at least 600 naturalised), which comprise ~14% of the vascular plants known from the Himalaya. Alien plant species with tropical affinities decline in richness with elevation and species at high elevations form a subset of those at lower elevations, supporting location of introduction as an important driver of alien plant richness patterns. Separately, elevations which are especially rich in native plant species are also especially rich in alien plant species, suggesting an important role for climate (high productivity) in determining both native and alien richness. We find no support for the proposition that human disturbance or resistance to invasion by native species affect alien distributions. Results imply an ongoing expansion of alien species from low elevation sources, some of which are highly invasive.