Drivers of Plant Invasions and Their Scale-Dependency in Grasslands

Alien Plant Species
Archaeophytes
Fine Grain
Grasslands
Invasive Plant Species
Level Of Invasion
Native Biodiversity
Neophytes
Spatial Scale Dependency
Ukraine
Authors

Oksana Buzhdygan

Selina Baldauf

Britta Tietjen

Svitlana Iemelianova

Dariia Borovyk

Denys Vynokurov

Olha Chusova

Vasyl Budzhak

Joana Bergmann

Jürgen Dengler

Iwona Dembicz

Monika Janišová

Iuliia Vasheniak

Jonathan Chase

Anna Kuzemko

Published

January 1, 2026

Abstract

Conservation and management policies for plant invasions often rely on coarse-scale data, while plant diversity effects on ecosystem functions and services are primarily driven by species interactions at small spatial scales. Yet, most evidence on invasion drivers at fine scales is limited to a single grain size, leaving uncertainty about their scale-dependency. Understanding such scale-dependency is essential for predicting and managing invasions effectively. We sampled plant communities across grassland habitats in Ukraine to assess how native species richness, environmental factors, and anthropogenic disturbances influence community invasion level – the proportions of all alien species, and separately for invasive species (fast-spreading aliens at advanced stages of invasion), archaeophytes (introduced before 1500 CE) and neophytes (post-1500 CE aliens). By analysing these groups across six fine-grain areas (0.001–100 m2), we tested for scale-dependent effects. Native species richness was the strongest driver of invasions, showing negative effects that weakened with increasing scale. Alien species were dominated by archaeophytes and occurred most in dry grasslands, and least in fringe, alpine, and mesic types, driven by climatic and disturbance gradients. A range of abiotic and anthropogenic drivers, including precipitation, temperature, disturbance, land use and urbanization also influenced invasion levels, but their importance varied with scale. Notably, the scale-dependency of invasion drivers differed among archaeophytes, neophytes, and invasive species. Our results highlight the importance of separating alien groups and considering multiple spatial grains to avoid overlooking key drivers of invasion. Focusing on scale- and group-specific factors can enhance the ecological relevance and efficiency of conservation and management strategies targeting plant invasions.

Citation

For attribution, please cite this work as:
Buzhdygan, Oksana, Selina Baldauf, Britta Tietjen, Svitlana Iemelianova, Dariia Borovyk, Denys Vynokurov, Olha Chusova, et al. 2026. “Drivers of Plant Invasions and Their Scale-Dependency in Grasslands .” Biological Conservation 313 (January): 111584. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2025.111584.