Yan Sun, Zhi-Kun Ren, Heinz Müller-Schärer, Ragan M. Callaway, Mark van Kleunen, Wei Huang
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引用次数: 0
摘要
外来植物入侵者可以通过直接或间接的促进作用(即所谓的 "入侵消融")促进其他植物的生长。土壤养分的增加也能通过提高入侵者的竞争影响来促进入侵者,但这可能会如何影响 "融化 "还不得而知。在一个中型宇宙实验中,我们评估了八种外来植物物种和八种欧亚本地物种如何对入侵植物柯尼莎(Conyza canadensis)密度的增加做出个体反应,同时改变养分的供应和波动。我们发现,C. canadensis密度的增加加剧了对本地物种的竞争性抑制,但却加强了对其他外来物种的促进作用。较高和波动的养分加剧了对本地植物的竞争效应和对外来植物的促进效应。总之,这些结果表明,在高养分供应和波动条件下,随着 C. canadensis 相对密度的增加,外来物种相对于本地目标物种具有明显优势。我们将这些结果与外来物种通常推动土壤资源增加的观察结果相结合,提出了资源驱动的入侵消融和抑制本地物种假说,即资源可用性的生物加速促进其他外来物种超过本地物种,从而导致入侵消融。
Increasing and fluctuating resource availability enhances invasional meltdown
Exotic plant invaders can promote others via direct or indirect facilitation, known as “invasional meltdown.” Increased soil nutrients can also promote invaders by increasing their competitive impacts, but how this might affect meltdown is unknown. In a mesocosm experiment, we evaluated how eight exotic plant species and eight Eurasian native species responded individually to increasing densities of the invasive plant Conyza canadensis, while varying the supply and fluctuations of nutrients. We found that increasing density of C. canadensis intensified competitive suppression of natives but intensified facilitation of other exotics. Higher and fluctuating nutrients exacerbated the competitive effects on natives and facilitative effects on exotics. Overall, these results show a pronounced advantage of exotics over native target species with increased relative density of C. canadensis under high nutrient availability and fluctuation. We integrate these results with the observation that exotic species commonly drive increases in soil resources to suggest the Resource-driven Invasional Meltdown and Inhibition of Natives hypothesis in which biotic acceleration of resource availability promotes other exotic species over native species, leading to invasional meltdown.
期刊介绍:
Ecology publishes articles that report on the basic elements of ecological research. Emphasis is placed on concise, clear articles documenting important ecological phenomena. The journal publishes a broad array of research that includes a rapidly expanding envelope of subject matter, techniques, approaches, and concepts: paleoecology through present-day phenomena; evolutionary, population, physiological, community, and ecosystem ecology, as well as biogeochemistry; inclusive of descriptive, comparative, experimental, mathematical, statistical, and interdisciplinary approaches.