Indirect Effects and Context Dependency in Stream Fish Invasions. Annis, W. K., Thompson, L. M., Midway, S. R., Olden, J. D., & Peoples, B. K. Diversity and Distributions, 31(1):e13968, 2025. _eprint: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/ddi.13968
Paper doi abstract bibtex Aim Invasion ecology is replete with a body of well-supported yet contradictory evidence for numerous invasion hypotheses, likely as a result of context dependency. Context dependency in invasion studies can arise in two ways: (1) apparent, when results differ between studies solely due to methodical differences, or (2) mechanistic, when results truly differ due to ecological processes. One form of apparent context dependency occurs when causally linked factors associated with invasion success (hereafter, invasion drivers) either mask or enhance each other's effect on invasion success. Mechanistic context dependency can occur when regional scale processes modify the influence of local scale invasion processes. Together, apparent and mechanistic context dependency likely give rise to conflicting support between invasion hypotheses via confounding effects of causally related invasion drivers and region-specific invasion processes. Location 2339 stream segments in two ecoregions of the United States. Methods Using local scale stream fish community data for two distinct ecoregions, we constructed identical path models to estimate the direct and indirect effects of invasion drivers on nonnative richness. We chose one variable to index invasion drivers from each of the following categories: propagule pressure, natural abiotic, anthropogenic abiotic and biotic factors. Results We found evidence of apparent context dependency through the presence of indirect effects, in which the effects of propagule pressure and biotic factors on nonnative richness were modulated by abiotic factors. The indirect effects of invasion drivers differed between both regions, providing evidence of mechanistic context dependency. Main Conclusions Apparent and mechanistic context dependency can lead to conflicting evidence between studies of invasion hypotheses. Accounting for indirect effects of invasion drivers is important in gaining a more general understanding of the invasion process. Furthermore, because indirect effects varied regionally, it is important to understand the large-scale processes that contextualise local invasion processes.
@article{annis_indirect_2025,
title = {Indirect {Effects} and {Context} {Dependency} in {Stream} {Fish} {Invasions}},
volume = {31},
copyright = {© 2025 The Author(s). Diversity and Distributions published by John Wiley \& Sons Ltd.},
issn = {1472-4642},
url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/ddi.13968},
doi = {10.1111/ddi.13968},
abstract = {Aim Invasion ecology is replete with a body of well-supported yet contradictory evidence for numerous invasion hypotheses, likely as a result of context dependency. Context dependency in invasion studies can arise in two ways: (1) apparent, when results differ between studies solely due to methodical differences, or (2) mechanistic, when results truly differ due to ecological processes. One form of apparent context dependency occurs when causally linked factors associated with invasion success (hereafter, invasion drivers) either mask or enhance each other's effect on invasion success. Mechanistic context dependency can occur when regional scale processes modify the influence of local scale invasion processes. Together, apparent and mechanistic context dependency likely give rise to conflicting support between invasion hypotheses via confounding effects of causally related invasion drivers and region-specific invasion processes. Location 2339 stream segments in two ecoregions of the United States. Methods Using local scale stream fish community data for two distinct ecoregions, we constructed identical path models to estimate the direct and indirect effects of invasion drivers on nonnative richness. We chose one variable to index invasion drivers from each of the following categories: propagule pressure, natural abiotic, anthropogenic abiotic and biotic factors. Results We found evidence of apparent context dependency through the presence of indirect effects, in which the effects of propagule pressure and biotic factors on nonnative richness were modulated by abiotic factors. The indirect effects of invasion drivers differed between both regions, providing evidence of mechanistic context dependency. Main Conclusions Apparent and mechanistic context dependency can lead to conflicting evidence between studies of invasion hypotheses. Accounting for indirect effects of invasion drivers is important in gaining a more general understanding of the invasion process. Furthermore, because indirect effects varied regionally, it is important to understand the large-scale processes that contextualise local invasion processes.},
language = {en},
number = {1},
urldate = {2026-05-21},
journal = {Diversity and Distributions},
author = {Annis, William K. and Thompson, Lily M. and Midway, Stephen R. and Olden, Julian D. and Peoples, Brandon K.},
year = {2025},
note = {\_eprint: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/ddi.13968},
keywords = {Terrestrial Ecoregions (Wiken 2011)},
pages = {e13968},
}
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One form of apparent context dependency occurs when causally linked factors associated with invasion success (hereafter, invasion drivers) either mask or enhance each other's effect on invasion success. Mechanistic context dependency can occur when regional scale processes modify the influence of local scale invasion processes. Together, apparent and mechanistic context dependency likely give rise to conflicting support between invasion hypotheses via confounding effects of causally related invasion drivers and region-specific invasion processes. Location 2339 stream segments in two ecoregions of the United States. Methods Using local scale stream fish community data for two distinct ecoregions, we constructed identical path models to estimate the direct and indirect effects of invasion drivers on nonnative richness. We chose one variable to index invasion drivers from each of the following categories: propagule pressure, natural abiotic, anthropogenic abiotic and biotic factors. 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Together, apparent and mechanistic context dependency likely give rise to conflicting support between invasion hypotheses via confounding effects of causally related invasion drivers and region-specific invasion processes. Location 2339 stream segments in two ecoregions of the United States. Methods Using local scale stream fish community data for two distinct ecoregions, we constructed identical path models to estimate the direct and indirect effects of invasion drivers on nonnative richness. We chose one variable to index invasion drivers from each of the following categories: propagule pressure, natural abiotic, anthropogenic abiotic and biotic factors. Results We found evidence of apparent context dependency through the presence of indirect effects, in which the effects of propagule pressure and biotic factors on nonnative richness were modulated by abiotic factors. 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