Reducing nitrogen inputs mitigates Spartina invasion in the Yangtze estuary

Author:

Xu Xiao12ORCID,Li Songshuo2ORCID,Zhang Yan2ORCID,Zhang Xi2ORCID,He Qiang2ORCID,Wan Nian‐Feng3ORCID,Liu Hao2ORCID,Guo Haiqiang2,Ma Jun2ORCID,Zhang Qun24,Wang Qing5,Wu Jihua6ORCID,Li Bo12ORCID,Nie Ming2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Transboundary Ecosecurity of Southwest China, Yunnan Key Laboratory of Plant Reproductive Adaptation and Evolutionary Ecology and Centre for Invasion Biology, Institute of Biodiversity, School of Ecology and Environmental Science Yunnan University Kunming China

2. Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Biodiversity Science and Ecological Engineering, National Observations and Research Station for Wetland Ecosystems of the Yangtze Estuary, Institute of Biodiversity Science and Institute of Eco‐Chongming, School of Life Sciences Fudan University Shanghai China

3. Shanghai Key Laboratory of Chemical Biology, School of Pharmacy East China University of Science and Technology Shanghai China

4. Shanghai Academy of Landscape Architecture Science and Planning Shanghai China

5. Shanghai Academy of Environmental Sciences Shanghai China

6. State Key Laboratory of Herbage Improvement and Grassland Agro‐Ecosystems, College of Ecology Lanzhou University Lanzhou China

Abstract

Abstract Plant invasions driven by global environmental changes (e.g. nutrient enrichment) increasingly threaten natural ecosystems. It is unclear whether reducing nitrogen (N) inputs helps to mitigate plant invasions in natural ecosystems. Using ongoing, landscape‐scale N reductions in the Yangtze River, we combined spatiotemporal surveys before and after reducing N inputs and manipulative experiments to explore how N reductions contributed to native community recovery in estuarine marshes degraded by plant invasions. We found that native Phragmites australis patches gradually recovered in Spartina alterniflora‐invaded marshes after reducing N inputs. The competitive advantage of S. alterniflora over P. australis decreased with N reduction, shifting the competitive outcomes away from P. australis exclusion to their coexistence. Synthesis and applications. Our findings reveal that the reversal of nitrogen enrichment may shift ecosystems from being more susceptible to invasion toward successional recovery, offering a promising approach for facilitating native community recovery in the invaded ecosystems. These findings have important implications for restoring invaded ecosystems, especially as global environmental change escalates the extent and impact of invaders by exacerbating current invasions and facilitating new ones.

Funder

Program of Shanghai Academic Research Leader

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology

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