Species invasions present a conservation paradox—native invaders help maintain species diversity, yet non-native invasive species can substantially alter communities and ecosystems. To address this issue, we investigated patterns of native and non-native colonization and the role each group played in long-term changes in native understory diversity and composition. We used a 55 year-old baseline dataset from 94 upland forest stands in southern
Results/Conclusions
For native species, both early successional stands and large stands in non-fragmented landscapes were more likely to gain new native species than were late-successional stands or those in highly fragmented or urbanized landscapes. Native colonization was twice as important as extinction in explaining diversity changes over the last half century in