| Literature DB >> 23840435 |
Bao-Ming Chen1, Shao-Lin Peng, Carla M D'Antonio, Dai-Jiang Li, Wen-Tao Ren.
Abstract
A common hypothesis to explain the effect of litter mixing is based on the difference in litter N content between mixed species. Although many studies have shown that litter of invasive non-native plants typically has higher N content than that of native plants in the communities they invade, there has been surprisingly little study of mixing effects during plant invasions. We address this question in south China where Mikania micrantha H.B.K., a non-native vine, with high litter N content, has invaded many forested ecosystems. We were specifically interested in whether this invader accelerated decomposition and how the strength of the litter mixing effect changes with the degree of invasion and over time during litter decomposition. Using litterbags, we evaluated the effect of mixing litter ofEntities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23840435 PMCID: PMC3688783 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0066289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Original Carbon and nitrogen content of plant litter.
| Species | Family | C | N | C/N |
|
| Moraceae | 41.34 | 1.46 | 28.26 |
|
| Lauraceae | 48.65 | 1.56 | 31.13 |
|
| Lauraceae | 49.52 | 1.16 | 42.54 |
|
| Fabaceae | 49.94 | 1.14 | 43.69 |
|
| Pinaceae | 49.58 | 0.88 | 56.34 |
|
| Theaceae | 49.84 | 1.08 | 46.15 |
|
| Fagaceae | 48.42 | 1.03 | 47.10 |
|
| Asteraceae | 36.03 | 1.79 | 20.14 |
non-native invasive species in Guangdong,southern China; Litter of the invasive species Mikania micrantha includes stems and leaves, while litter of above 7 natives are only leaves.
Figure 1Mean (+SE, n = 4) percentage of litter mass loss of the 7 native single species and non-native (exotic) invasive species M. micrantha after 60 d, 128 d and 180 d decay.
The analysis of litter mass loss among 8 single species over each decay time by ANOVA is shown in Table S1.
Analyses of litter mixing effects for litter mass loss and nutrient release were performed by mixed effect model with mixture type (species) and mixing ratio as fixed effects and decay time as a random effect.
| Source | NumDF | DenDF | Litter mass loss | Litter N release | Litter C release | |||||
| F | P | F | P | F | P | |||||
| Species | 6 | 229 | 7.354 | 0.000 | 6.364 | 0.000 | 5.563 | 0.000 | ||
| Ratio | 2 | 229 | 13.574 | 0.000 | 3.787 | 0.024 | 1.021 | 0.362 | ||
| Species × Ratio | 12 | 229 | 1.206 | 0.280 | 1.013 | 0.437 | 1.899 | 0.035 | ||
Figure 2Mean mixing interaction strength values (+SE, n = 4) of litter mass loss after 60 (A), 128 (B) and 180 (C) days decay.
M1 (1∶4, mixture with 20% exotic litter), M2 (1∶1) and M3 (4∶1, mixture with 80% exotic litter) represent 3 different litter mixing ratio of M. micrantha to native species. Non-additive interactions are significantly different from zero with (**) at P<0.01, (*) at P<0.05, and with (#) at P<0.10 tested separately with one sample t test. See Table S4 for observed litter mass loss.
Figure 3Mean mixing interaction strength values (+SE, n = 4) of litter N releases after 60 (A), 128 (B) and 180 (C) days decay.
M1 (1∶4, mixture with 20% exotic litter), M2 (1∶1) and M3 (4∶1, mixture with 80% exotic litter) represent 3 different litter mixing ratio of M. micrantha to native species. Non-additive interactions are significantly different from zero with (**) at P<0.01, (*) at P<0.05, and with (#) at P<0.10 tested separately with one sample t test. See Table S5 for observed N release.
Figure 4Mean mixing interaction strength values (+SE, n = 4) of litter C releases after 60 (A), 128 (B) and 180 (C) days decay.
M1 (1∶4, mixture with 20% exotic litter), M2 (1∶1) and M3 (4∶1, mixture with 80% exotic litter) represent 3 different litter mixing ratio of M. micrantha to native species. Non-additive interactions are significantly different from zero with (**) at P<0.01, (*) at P<0.05, and with (#) at P<0.10 tested separately with one sample t test. See Table S6 for observed C release.