Resource stoichiometry shapes community invasion resistance via productivity-mediated species identity effects

Author:

Yang Tianjie12ORCID,Han Gang1,Yang Qingjun1,Friman Ville-Petri13,Gu Shaohua1,Wei Zhong1ORCID,Kowalchuk George A.12,Xu Yangchun1,Shen Qirong1,Jousset Alexandre12

Affiliation:

1. Jiangsu Provincial Key Lab of Solid Organic Waste Utilization, Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center of Solid Organic Wastes, Educational Ministry Engineering Center of Resource-Saving Fertilizers, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing 210095, Jiangsu, People's Republic of China

2. Institute for Environmental Biology, Ecology and Biodiversity, Utrecht University, Padualaan 8, 3584 CH Utrecht, The Netherlands

3. Department of Biology, University of York, Wentworth Way, YO10 5DD, York, UK

Abstract

Diversity–invasion resistance relationships are often variable and sensitive to environmental conditions such as resource availability. Resource stoichiometry, the relative concentration of different elements in the environment, has been shown to have strong effects on the physiology and interactions between different species. Yet, its role for diversity–invasion resistance relationships is still poorly understood. Here, we explored how the ratio of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus affects the productivity and invasion resistance of constructed microbial communities by a plant pathogenic bacterium, Ralstonia solanacearum . We found that resource stoichiometry and species identity effects affected the invasion resistance of communities. Both high N concentration and resident community diversity constrained invasions, and two resident species, in particular, had strong negative effects on the relative density of the invader and the resident community productivity. While resource stoichiometry did not affect the mean productivity of the resident community, it favoured the growth of two species that strongly constrained invasions turning the slope of productivity–invasion resistance relationship more negative. Together our findings suggest that alterations in resource stoichiometry can change the community resistance to invasions by having disproportionate effects on species growth, potentially explaining changes in microbial community composition under eutrophication.

Funder

Young Elite Scientist Sponsorship Program by CAST

National Key Basic Research Program of China

Qing Lan Project

Wellcome Trust

Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province

Dutch Science foundation NWO

National Natural Science Foundation of China

111 project

Chinese Scholarship Council

Royal Society Research Grant

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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