Substrate availability regulates the suppressive effects of Canada goldenrod invasion on soil respiration

Author:

Hu Zhiyuan1,Zhang Jiaqi2,Du Yizhou3,Shi Kangwei1,Ren Guangqian1,Iqbal Babar1,Dai Zhicong1ORCID,Li Jian1,Li Guanlin1,Du Daolin1

Affiliation:

1. School of the Environment and Safety Engineering, Jiangsu University, Zhenjiang, China

2. Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Ecology of Tropical Islands, Key Laboratory of Tropical Animal and Plant Ecology of Hainan Province, College of Life Sciences, Hainan Normal University, Haikou, China

3. School of Computer Science, Faculty of Engineering, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSWAustralia

Abstract

Abstract Aims Invasive alien plants cannot only decrease riparian vegetation diversity but also alter wetland ecosystem carbon processes, especially when they displace the original vegetation. Invasive Canada goldenrod (Solidago canadensis) has colonized large areas of disturbed and undisturbed land in southeastern China, yet little is known regarding how it affects soil carbon cycling. To explore the response patterns of soil respiration following S. canadensis invasion and their driving mechanisms, an observational field study and a greenhouse experiment simulating invasion were performed. Methods In the field study, soil respiration was measured weekly from 21 th of July to 15 th of December 2018. In the greenhouse experiment, soil respiration, autotrophic and heterotrophic respiration was measured every 1 st and 15 th of the month 15 th of July to 15 th of December 2019. Soil, autotrophic and heterotrophic respiration were measured using a closed-chamber system with the deep gauze collar root exclusion method. Important Findings Solidago canadensis invasion appeared to decrease the total soil CO2 emissions in both the field study and the greenhouse experiment. The suppressive effects on soil respiration may be attributed to S. canadensis invasion-induced alterations in the quality and quantity of available soil substrate, suggesting that S. canadensis invasion may impact soil carbon cycling via plant-released substrates and by competing for the soil available substrate with native plant and/or soil microbes. These results have substantial implications for estimations of the effects of invasive plants on belowground carbon dynamics and their contribution to the warming world.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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