“…Most empirical studies of plant invasions have focused on negative interactions, that is competition and predation (reviewed by Jeschke et al, 2012;Maron & Vila, 2001;Mitchell et al, 2006;Roy, Lawson Handley, Schonrogge, Poland, & Purse, 2011), but positive interactions can also influence invasion trajectories (reviewed by Simberloff, 2006;Travaset & Richardson, 2014). In this context, native species in deserts can exacerbate plant invasions by strongly facilitating the abundance (Lucero et al, 2019;Schafer et al, 2012), performance (Holzapfel & Mahall, 1999) and population growth (Griffith, 2010) of invasive plant species, or by indirectly increasing the competitive effects of invasive species on native neighbours (Llambi, Hupp, Saez, & Callaway, 2018;Reisner, Doescher, & Pyke, 2015). There is some evidence that the intensity of positive interactions between native and invasive species can vary along environmental gradients (Badano, Villarroel, Bustamante, Marquet, & Cavieres, 2007;Saccone, Pages, Griel, & Michalet, 2010), but very few dryland studies have measured the intensity and importance of such interactions along an aridity gradient.…”