| Literature DB >> 32221401 |
Antonella Petruzzella1, Tauany A da S S R Rodrigues2, Casper H A van Leeuwen3, Francisco de Assis Esteves2,4, Marcos Paulo Figueiredo-Barros4, Elisabeth S Bakker3.
Abstract
Biotic resistance mediated by native plant diversity has long been hypothesized to reduce the success of invading plant species in terrestrial systems in temperate regions. However, still little is known about the mechanisms driving invasion patterns in other biomes or latitudes. We help to fill this gap by investigating how native plant community presence and diversity, and the presence of native phylogenetically closely related species to an invader, would affect invader Hydrilla verticillata establishment success in tropical freshwater submerged plant communities. The presence of a native community suppressed the growth of H. verticillata, but did not prevent its colonisation. Invader growth was negatively affected by native plant productivity, but independent of native species richness and phylogenetic relatedness to the invader. Native plant production was not related to native species richness in our study. We show that resistance in these tropical aquatic submerged plant communities is mainly driven by the presence and biomass of a native community independent of native species diversity. Our study illustrates that resistance provided by these tropical freshwater submerged plant communities to invasive species contrasts to resistance described for other ecosystems. This emphasizes the need to include understudied systems when predicting patterns of species invasiveness and ecosystem invasibility across biomes.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32221401 PMCID: PMC7101304 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-62660-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Results of General Linear Mixed effect models testing how four different growth parameters of the invader species Hydrilla verticillata depended on the presence of a native community, native species richness (data shown in Fig. 1) and the presence of the phylogenetically related species Egeria densa.
| Fixed effects | Root DW | Shoot DW | Root:shoot | RGR | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Presence of native community | 41 | −4.85 | < | 41 | −3.15 | 41 | −3.63 | < | 41 | −3.34 | ||
Species richness (including bare sediment) | 41 | −3.56 | < | 41 | −2.31 | 41 | −3.07 | 41 | −2.23 | |||
Species richness (excluding bare sediment) | 35 | −1.40 (log) | 0.171 | 35 | −0.48 | 0.633 | 35 | −1.20 | 0.238 | 35 | −0.22 | 0.825 |
| Presence of | 41 | −2.26 | 41 | −1.51 | 0.139 | 41 | −1.66 (log) | 0.105 | 41 | −1.24 | 0.221 | |
Block is included as a random factor. Significant effects (p < 0.05) are in bold. (log) means the response variable was log-transformed. Root DW = Root dry weight, Shoot DW = Shoot dry weight, Root:shoot = Root:shoot ratio, RGR = Relative growth rate.
Figure 1Effect of native plant species richness on the invader Hydrilla verticillata (a) root biomass (dry weight), (b) shoot biomass (dry weight), (c) root:shoot ratio, (d) relative growth rate (RGR). The orange solid lines are based on GLMMs that include the bare sediment treatments (0 species level) in the analysis, and are all statistically significant (Table 1). Black dashed lines are without including bare sediment (0 species level) in the analyses and are all not significant (Table 1). Each dot represents a replicate.
Figure 2Relationship between the native community biomass and the total final biomass DW (dry weight, g) of the invader Hydrilla verticillata.
Overview of the 8 treatments used in the mesocosm experiment and the final mean native community biomass dry weight (g) across different treatments.
| Diversity treatment | Abbreviated community composition | Species | Native community biomass (g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bare | Bare sediment | 0 ± 0 |
| 2 | C | 0.69 ± 0.08 | |
| 3 | E | 2.86 ± 0.19 | |
| 4 | U | 1.67 ± 0.57 | |
| 5 | CE | 1.89 ± 0.18 | |
| 6 | CU | 1.26 ± 0.24 | |
| 7 | EU | 2.29 ± 0.60 | |
| 8 | CEU | 1.88 ± 0.56 |
Bare = Bare sediment, C = Cabomba furcata, E = Egeria densa, U = Utricularia foliosa.
Figure 3Effects of single native species on the invader Hydrilla verticillata (a) root biomass (dry weight), (b) shoot biomass (dry weight), (c) root:shoot ratio and (d) relative growth rate (RGR). Bare- Bare sediment, C- Cabomba furcata, E- Egeria densa, U- Utricularia foliosa. Different lowercase letters indicate statistically significant differences among treatments (Tukey’s HSD post hoc test). Significance levels were determined after Bonferroni’s correction for multiple testing (P < 0.008). The values are means ± standard error of the mean (n = 6).
Figure 4Phylogeny displaying phylogenetic relationships among the four species included in this study based on PhytoPhylo megaphylogeny[68]. The invader species Hydrilla verticillata is represented in red.