Microplastics and cadmium affect invasion success by altering complementarity and selection effects in native community

The diversity-invasibility hypothesis predicts that native plant communities with high biodiversity should be more resistant to invasion than low biodiversity communities. However, observational studies have found that there is often a positive relationship between native community diversity and inv...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2024-04, Vol.921, p.171135-171135, Article 171135
Hauptverfasser: He, Feng, Sun, Jianfan, Wan, Justin S.H., Nawaz, Mohsin, Javed, Qaiser, Pan, Linxuan, Khattak, Wajid Ali, Bo, Yanwen, Xiang, Yan, Ren, Guangqian, Lin, Xin, Du, Daolin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The diversity-invasibility hypothesis predicts that native plant communities with high biodiversity should be more resistant to invasion than low biodiversity communities. However, observational studies have found that there is often a positive relationship between native community diversity and invasibility. Pollutants were not tested for their potential to cause this positive relationship. Here, we established native communities with three levels of diversity (1, 2 and 4 species) and introduced an invasive plant [Symphyotrichum subulatum (Michx.) G. L. Nesom] to test the effects of different pollutant treatments (i.e., unpolluted control, microplastics (MPs) alone, cadmium (Cd) alone, and their combination) on the relationship between native community diversity and community invasibility. Our results indicate that different MPs and Cd treatments altered the invasibility of native communities, but this effect may depend on the type of pollutant. MPs single treatment reduced invasion success, and the degree of reduction increased with increasing native community diversity (Diversity 2: - 14.1 %; Diversity 4: - 63.1 %). Cd single treatment increased the aboveground biomass of invasive plants (+ 40.2 %) and invasion success. The presence of MPs inhibited the contribution of Cd to invasion success. Furthermore, we found that the complementarity and selection effects of the native community were negatively correlated with invasion success, and their relative contributions to invasion success also depended on the pollutant type. We found new evidence of how pollutants affect the relationship between native community diversity and habitat invasibility, which provides new perspectives for understanding and managing biological invasions in the context of environmental pollution. This may contribute to promoting the conservation of biodiversity, especially in ecologically sensitive and polluted areas. Soil microplastics (MPs) and cadmium (Cd) have varying effects on native community diversity-invasibility relationships, potentially influencing the invasion of exotic plants in contaminated native communities. MPs inhibit invasion success by facilitating the native community diversity-selection effect relationship, and Cd promote invasion success by inhibiting the native community diversity-complementarity effect relationship. [Display omitted] •Effects of MPs and Cd on the native diversity-invasibility relationship was for the first time.•MPs promotes diversity-sele
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.171135