Department of Biology and Animal Science, São Paulo State University (UNESP), Ilha Solteira, Passeio Monção 226 Zona Norte, Ilha Solteira, SP, 15385-000, Brazil.
Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zürich, Universitätstrasse 16, 8092, Zürich, Switzerland.
Sci Rep. 2020 Jul 9;10(1):11365. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-68412-5.
Worldwide, alien plant invasions have been intensively studied in the past decades, but mechanisms controlling the invasibility of native communities are not fully understood yet. The stochastic niche hypothesis predicts that species-rich plant communities are less prone to alien plant invasions than species-poor communities, which is supported by some but not all field studies, with some very species-rich communities such as the Brazilian Cerrado becoming heavily invaded. However, species-rich communities potentially contain a greater variety of facilitative interactions in resource exploitation than species-poor communities, from which invasive plants might benefit. This alternative hypothetical mechanism might explain why nutrient-poor, species-rich ecosystems are prone to invasion. Here we show that a high species richness both impedes and promotes invasive plants in the Brazilian Cerrado, using structural equation modelling and data from 38 field sites. We found support for the stochastic niche hypothesis through an observed direct negative influence of species richness on abundance of alien invasive species, but an indirect positive effect of species richness on invasive alien plants through soil phosphatase activity that enhances P availability was also found. These field observations were supported with results from a mesocosm experiment. Root phosphatase activity of plants increased with species richness in the mesocosms, which was associated with greater community P and N uptake. The most prominent alien grass species of the region, Melinis minutiflora, benefited most from the higher N and P availability in the species mixtures. Hence, this study provides a novel explanation of why species-richness may sometimes promote rather than impede invasion, and highlights the need to perform facilitation experiments in multi-species communities.
在过去的几十年里,全球范围内对入侵外来植物进行了深入研究,但控制本地社区可入侵性的机制尚未完全理解。随机生态位假说预测,物种丰富的植物群落比物种贫乏的群落更不容易受到外来植物的入侵,这一假说得到了一些但不是所有实地研究的支持,一些非常物种丰富的群落,如巴西塞拉多,已经受到严重入侵。然而,物种丰富的群落可能在资源利用中包含更多的促进互利共生的相互作用,而这些相互作用可能会使外来植物受益。这种替代的假设机制可能可以解释为什么营养贫乏、物种丰富的生态系统容易受到入侵。在这里,我们使用结构方程模型和来自 38 个实地站点的数据,表明在巴西塞拉多,高物种丰富度既阻碍也促进了入侵植物。我们通过观察到物种丰富度对入侵外来物种丰度的直接负影响,支持了随机生态位假说,但也发现了物种丰富度通过土壤磷酸酶活性对入侵外来植物的间接正影响,这种间接正影响增强了磷的可利用性。这些实地观察结果得到了中尺度实验的支持。中尺度实验中,植物的根磷酸酶活性随着物种丰富度的增加而增加,这与更大的社区磷和氮吸收有关。该地区最突出的外来草种 Melinis minutiflora 从物种混合物中更高的氮和磷供应中获益最多。因此,这项研究提供了一个新的解释,说明为什么物种丰富度有时可能促进而不是阻碍入侵,并强调了在多物种群落中进行促进实验的必要性。