“…For native plant species, clonal integration has been repeatedly shown to facilitate establishment of newly produced daughter ramets (Hartnett & Bazzaz, ; Dong & Alaten, ; Touchette et al ., ), to increase growth of ramets in stressful habitats (Stuefer et al ., ; Alpert, ; Roiloa et al ., ), and to enhance fitness of the whole clone (Hellstrom et al ., ; Song et al ., ; Chen et al ., ). Other studies have shown that clonal integration can also greatly increase performance of invasive alien plant species (Roiloa et al ., ; Xu et al ., ; Wang et al ., ), including some of the world's worst invasive alien plant species such as Eichhornia crassipes (Alpert et al ., ), Alternanthera philoxeroides (Wang et al ., ; Yu et al ., ) and Spartina alterniflora (Xiao et al ., ). A recent meta‐analysis examined the relationship between the effect of clonal integration and measures of the degree of invasiveness (number of regions and references) around the world of 60 clonal plant species (Song et al ., ).…”