Emergence of nutrient-cycling feedbacks related to plant size and invasion success in a wetland community-ecosystem model
Authored by William S Currie, Deborah E Goldberg, Jason Martina, Radka Wildova, Emily Farrer, Kenneth J Elgersma
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2014.01.010
Sponsors:
United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
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Abstract
Invasive plants in wetlands may alter community composition through
complex interactions related to elevated N inflows, plant size, litter
production, and ecosystem N retention and recycling. To investigate
these interactions, we constructed an individual-based model, MONDRIAN, that integrates individual growth and clonal reproduction, nutrient
competitive interactions among species, and ecosystem processes. We
conducted in silico experiments, parameterized for Great Lakes coastal
marshes, where invaders that differed only in size attempted to invade
native communities across a range of N inflows. Small invaders were able
to persist only at low N inflow and never dominated. Large invaders were
not able to reproduce clonally at low N inflow but they successfully
coexisted with natives at intermediate N inflow and dominated at high N
inflow, excluding natives in some cases. In both native and invaded
communities, a positive feedback in plant-detritus N cycling emerged, amplifying ecosystem N cycling to nearly 2x the range of N inflows. The
largest invaders augmented this N-cycling feedback over the native
community by up to 23\%, increasing with greater N inflow, driving
community NPP higher than the native community by 33\% and litter mass
higher by 35\%. In communities dominated by the largest invader, wetland
N retention was increased but species diversity decreased. Results
demonstrate that a single trait difference, plant size, simultaneously
allows natives to resist invasion at low N inflows and allows invaders
to dominate at high N inflows, partly through augmenting ecosystem
N-cycling feedbacks. (c) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Environmental-change
Fresh-water
Typha-x-glauca
Lakes coastal wetlands
Soil organic-matter
Phalaris-arundinacea
Phragmites-australis
Nitrogen-cycle
Nitrate-n
Litter