Biotic interactions drive ecosystem responses to exotic plant invaders
0106 biological sciences
2. Zero hunger
570
500
Plants
15. Life on land
Biota
01 natural sciences
invasive species
Soil
13. Climate action
Herbivory
Introduced Species
DOI:
10.1126/science.aba2225
Publication Date:
2020-05-28T23:05:29Z
AUTHORS (12)
ABSTRACT
Exotic plants reduce carbon sequestration
Invasive exotic plants have become a major problem worldwide, with transformational effects on the composition and function of ecosystems. In a multifactorial experiment in New Zealand, Waller
et al.
show that exotic plants accelerate carbon loss from soils through their interactions with invertebrate herbivores and soil biota (see the Perspective by Urcelay and Austin). They built 160 mini-ecosystems in the field, manipulating interactions among plants, invertebrate herbivores, and soil biota. Key biological and abiotic responses were measured to quantify the relative contribution and interactions of the components of each community, revealing the potential of invasive plants to influence and suppress carbon sequestration through biotic interactions.
Science
, this issue p.
967
; see also p.
934
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