Impact of invasive species on soil hydraulic properties: importance of functional traits

To understand the effects of invasive species on soil hydraulic properties is a challenging task for Neotropical dry ecosystems because the relative paucity of knowledge of linkages between functional traits of species in response to drought conditions and land-cover transformation contexts. We test...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biological invasions 2020-06, Vol.22 (6), p.1849-1863
Hauptverfasser: Vasquez-Valderrama, Maribel, González-M, Roy, López-Camacho, René, Baptiste, María Piedad, Salgado-Negret, Beatriz
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container_end_page 1863
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1849
container_title Biological invasions
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creator Vasquez-Valderrama, Maribel
González-M, Roy
López-Camacho, René
Baptiste, María Piedad
Salgado-Negret, Beatriz
description To understand the effects of invasive species on soil hydraulic properties is a challenging task for Neotropical dry ecosystems because the relative paucity of knowledge of linkages between functional traits of species in response to drought conditions and land-cover transformation contexts. We tested whether functional strategies vary between native and invasive plants and if these differences have impact on processes at ecosystem level. Eight functional traits in wood and leaves of all woody species reported in our study area were measured. Over two contrasting climatic seasons and three vegetation covers, we measured four water regulation properties of soils. We found that forest covers showed higher values of hydraulic conductivity, water infiltration rate, volumetric water content and lower penetration resistance (lower compaction) of soils for both climatic seasons than other vegetation covers. In contrast, zones dominated by invasive species and degraded covers showed greater similarity between hydraulic properties in the soil and high variation among climatic seasons. Additionally, evergreen and deciduous species were functionally different, and invasive evergreen legumes were characterized by acquisitive hydraulic traits but leaf, height and wood density related with conservative strategies. The dominance of functional traits, mainly hydraulic traits, was correlated with volumetric moisture content of the soil. The functional differences between invasive and native species explained the lower soil moisture and greater soil compaction values in invasive covers compared to the forest covers. These results confirm that introduction of invasive species have an impact on soil ecosystem properties on tropical dry forests. Additionally, it is possible that invasive species can help to recover some hydraulic properties and can facilities the restoration processes in degraded areas where the native species failed to colonize.
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subjects Biomedical and Life Sciences
Developmental Biology
Drought
Dry forests
Ecology
Ecosystems
Environmental regulations
Freshwater & Marine Ecology
Herbivores
Hydraulic properties
Hydraulics
Indigenous species
Infiltration rate
Introduced species
Invasive plants
Invasive species
Land cover
Leaves
Legumes
Leguminous plants
Life Sciences
Moisture content
Native species
Nonnative species
Original Paper
Penetration resistance
Plant Sciences
Restoration
Seasons
Soil compaction
Soil moisture
Soil properties
Soil water
Soils
Tropical forests
Vegetation
Water content
Water infiltration
Wood
title Impact of invasive species on soil hydraulic properties: importance of functional traits
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