Craig Matthew E, Pearson Scott M, Fraterrigo Jennifer M
Ecology. 2015 Aug;96(8):2265-79. doi: 10.1890/14-1770.1.
Plant invasions can alter the quality and quantity of detrital and root-derived inputs entering a system, thereby influencing the activities of microbial decomposers and affecting the soil carbon cycle. The effect of these inputs on soil carbon storage is often conflicting, suggesting strong context dependency in the plant-decomposer relationship. Whether there is a generalizable pattern that explains this dependency remains relatively unexplored. Here, we (1) examine how invasion by the exotic grass Microstegium vimineum affects carbon cycling across a land use gradient, and (2) evaluate the importance of inorganic nitrogen availability and other environmental variables for explaining patterns in soil carbon. Using paired invaded and uninvaded plots, we quantified invasion effects on belowground carbon pools, extracellular enzyme activities, and native leaf litter decomposition in forests embedded in an urban, agricultural, or forested landscape matrix. Compared to the urban matrix, invasion-associated declines in total soil organic carbon in the forested and agricultural landscapes were 3.5 and 2.5 times greater, respectively. Inorganic nitrogen availability and M. vimineum biomass interacted to explain these patterns: when both nitrogen availability and M. vimineum biomass were high, invaded soils exhibited higher total organic carbon, unchanged particulate organic matter carbon, and higher mineral-associated organic matter carbon compared to adjacent uninvaded soils. Consistent with these patterns, activities of carbon-mineralizing enzymes were lower in invaded than in uninvaded soils when both nitrogen availability and M. vimineum biomass were high. By contrast,. decomposition of native leaf litter was faster when inorganic nitrogen availability and M. vimineum biomass were high. Our findings suggest that, although this invader may accelerate carbon cycling in forest soils, its effects on soil carbon storage largely depend on nitrogen availability and invader biomass, which can be altered by landscape-level patterns of land use. Additional research is needed to determine whether land use or other broad-scale processes such as atmospheric nitrogen deposition can explain context dependence in plant invasion effects on other ecosystem processes.
植物入侵会改变进入一个系统的碎屑和根系衍生输入物的质量和数量,从而影响微生物分解者的活动并影响土壤碳循环。这些输入物对土壤碳储存的影响往往相互矛盾,这表明植物与分解者的关系具有很强的背景依赖性。是否存在一种可概括的模式来解释这种依赖性仍相对未被探索。在这里,我们(1)研究外来草种薇甘菊的入侵如何在土地利用梯度上影响碳循环,以及(2)评估无机氮有效性和其他环境变量对解释土壤碳模式的重要性。我们使用成对的入侵和未入侵地块,量化了入侵对嵌入城市、农业或森林景观矩阵中的森林地下碳库、胞外酶活性和本地落叶分解的影响。与城市矩阵相比,森林和农业景观中与入侵相关的总土壤有机碳下降分别大3.5倍和2.5倍。无机氮有效性和薇甘菊生物量相互作用来解释这些模式:当氮有效性和薇甘菊生物量都很高时,与相邻未入侵土壤相比,入侵土壤表现出更高的总有机碳、不变的颗粒有机碳和更高的矿物相关有机碳。与这些模式一致,当氮有效性和薇甘菊生物量都很高时,入侵土壤中碳矿化酶的活性低于未入侵土壤。相比之下,当无机氮有效性和薇甘菊生物量都很高时,本地落叶的分解更快。我们的研究结果表明,尽管这种入侵者可能会加速森林土壤中的碳循环,但其对土壤碳储存的影响在很大程度上取决于氮有效性和入侵者生物量,而这可能会因景观层面的土地利用模式而改变。需要进一步的研究来确定土地利用或其他大规模过程(如大气氮沉降)是否可以解释植物入侵对其他生态系统过程影响中的背景依赖性。