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Functional traits explain the consistent resistance of biodiversity to plant invasion under nitrogen enrichment. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Elton's biotic resistance hypothesis suggests that communities with high species diversity are better at resisting invasive species, and this has been backed by numerous experiments.
  • A 4-year grassland study using common ragweed showed that higher resident species diversity consistently led to lower invasibility, regardless of nitrogen availability.
  • The research highlights that factors like increased biomass, greater trait dissimilarity among species, and the presence of resource-conservative traits contribute to this resistance, underscoring the importance of functional traits in understanding biological invasions, especially in changing environments.

Article Abstract

Elton's biotic resistance hypothesis, which posits that diverse communities should be more resistant to biological invasions, has received considerable experimental support. However, it remains unclear whether such a negative diversity-invasibility relationship would persist under anthropogenic environmental change. By using the common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) as a model invader, our 4-year grassland experiment demonstrated consistently negative relationships between resident species diversity and community invasibility, irrespective of nitrogen addition, a result further supported by a meta-analysis. Importantly, our experiment showed that plant diversity consistently resisted invasion simultaneously through increased resident biomass, increased trait dissimilarity among residents, and increased community-weighted means of resource-conservative traits that strongly resist invasion, pointing to the importance of both trait complementarity and sampling effects for invasion resistance even under resource enrichment. Our study provides unique evidence that considering species' functional traits can help further our understanding of biotic resistance to biological invasions in a changing environment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ele.13951DOI Listing

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