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Relative cover and leaf economic traits for native and non-native plants across five U.S. ecoregions

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DataONE2025-06-16 更新2025-06-21 收录
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Are non-native plants abundant because they are non-native, and have advantages over native plants, or because they possess ‘fast’ resource strategies, and have advantages in disturbed environments? This question is central to invasion biology but remains unanswered. We quantified the relative importance of resource strategy and origin in 69,441 plots across the conterminous United States containing 11,280 plant species. Non-native species had faster economic traits than native species in most plant communities (77%, 86%, and 82% of plots for leaf nitrogen concentration, specific leaf area, and leaf dry matter content). Non-native species also had distinct patterns of abundance, but these were not explained by their fast traits. Compared to functionally similar native species, non-native species (1) were more abundant in plains and deserts, indicating the importance of biogeographical origin, and less abundant in forested ecoregions, (2) were more abundant where co-occurring species had..., Plant cover data were compiled from multiple sources including state and federal land management agencies, which used a variety of methods for measuring plant cover within plots. See Petri et al. (2022) for details on data compilation. Plant growth form data were obtained from the USDA Plants database. Data from the TRY database (https://www.try-db.org/TryWeb/Home.php) included leaf nitrogen content, leaf dry matter content, and specific leaf area, and were averaged to the species level prior to being combined with plant cover datasets. Code used in associated analyses, described in Blumenthal et al. (2025), is available at: https://github.com/DiezJ/PAINLES-repository., # Relative cover and leaf economic traits for native and non-native plants across five U.S. ecoregions Dataset DOI: [10.5061/dryad.rjdfn2zpq](10.5061/dryad.rjdfn2zpq) ## Description of the data and file structure: This dataset contains eight data files, each one accompanied by a separate data dictionary for clarity. The files are available in comma-delimited format. They are a supplement to: Blumenthal et al. 2025, “Why are non-native plants successful? Consistently fast economic traits and novel origin jointly explain abundance across U.S. ecoregions.” New Phytologist. Data on plant cover, taxonomy, origin, and growth form were obtained from Petri *et al.* (2022), and combined with trait data from the TRY database (Kattge *et al.* 2020) as described in Blumenthal *et al.* (2025). Kattge J, Bönisch G, Díaz S, Lavorel S, Prentice IC, Leadley P, Tautenhahn S, Werner GD, Aakala T, Abedi M. *et al.* 2020. TRY plant trait database–enhanced coverage and open access. Global Change Biol...,
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2025-06-17
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