Soil microbial legacies and drought mediate diversity-invasibility
relationships in non-native communities
- Jiahui Yi,
- Zhibin Tao,
- Kaoping Zhang,
- Baoguo Nie,
- Evan Siemann,
- Wei Huang
Jiahui Yi
Wuhan Botanical Garden Chinese Academy of Sciences
Author ProfileZhibin Tao
Wuhan Botanical Garden Chinese Academy of Sciences
Author ProfileBaoguo Nie
Wuhan Botanical Garden Chinese Academy of Sciences
Author ProfileWei Huang
Chinese Academy of Sciences Key Laboratory of Aquatic Botany and Watershed Ecology
Corresponding Author:huangwei0519@wbgcas.cn
Author ProfileAbstract
High native species diversity generally suppresses non-native invasions,
but many ecosystems are now characterized by non-native assemblages that
vary in species diversity. How this non-native species diversity affects
subsequent invaders and its environmental dependence remain unclear.
Here, we conducted a plant-soil feedback experiment to investigate how
non-native plant species diversity affects the growth of subsequent
non-native plants, the role of soil microbes in this process, and the
dependence of these patterns on drought. We found that under
well-watered conditions, the biomass of subsequent invaders was higher
with soil inocula generated by high non-native diversity, which was
associated with higher arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal richness. However,
under drought conditions, the biomass of subsequent invaders did not
depend on soil inocula generated by non-native diversity. Our study
reveals soil microbial legacies likely contribute to the commonly
observed co-occurrence of multiple non-native species in nature and the
importance of environmental conditions for these effects.