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The more microplastic types pollute the soil, the stronger the growth suppression of invasive alien and native plants

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Datum der Erstveröffentlichung

2024

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DRYAD

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National Natural Science Foundation of China: 32201341

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Core Facility der Universität Konstanz
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Published

Zusammenfassung

The ecological consequences of microplastic pollution for plants remain largely unknown, and the few studies that tested the effects usually focused on a single type of microplastic and a single plant species. However, most plants will be exposed to multiple microplastic types simultaneously, and the effects may vary among species.

To test the effects of microplastic diversity on plants, we grew single plants of eight invasive and eight native species in pots with substrate polluted with 0, 1, 3 and 6 types of microplastics.

We found that the growth suppression by microplastic pollution became stronger with the number of microplastic types the plants were exposed to. This tended to be particularly the case for invasive species, as their biomass advantage over natives diminished with the number of microplastic types. The biomass responses coincided with a positive effect of the number of microplastic types on root allocation and thickness, which was also stronger for invasive than for native species. In addition, the results of hierarchical diversity-interaction models suggest that the negative impact of microplastic diversity on the total biomass of invasive plant species was influenced by both the identities of the microplastic and certain types of microplastic with strong pairwise interactions. In contrast, the effect on native species was determined solely by the microplastic identities.

Synthesis: Our multi-species study thus shows for the first time that the negative effects of microplastic pollution on plant growth increase with the number of microplastic types. We also found tentative evidence that the negative impacts of microplastic diversity were more pronounced for invasive plants compared to native plants, and that this might be due to differences in the responses of root allocation and thickness.

Zusammenfassung in einer weiteren Sprache

Fachgebiet (DDC)
570 Biowissenschaften, Biologie

Schlagwörter

exotic, Global Change, microplastic diversity, invasiveness, non-native, stress, FOS: Natural sciences

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Publikation
Zeitschriftenartikel
The more microplastic types pollute the soil, the stronger the growth suppression of invasive alien and native plants
(2024) Fu, Yanmei; van Kleunen, Mark; Ma, Kai; Liu, Yanjie
Erschienen in: Journal of Ecology. Wiley. 2024, 112(7), S. 1444-1457. ISSN 0022-0477. eISSN 1365-2745. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.1111/1365-2745.14316
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ISO 690FU, Yanmei, Mark VAN KLEUNEN, Kai MA, Yanjie LIU, 2024. The more microplastic types pollute the soil, the stronger the growth suppression of invasive alien and native plants
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To test the effects of microplastic diversity on plants, we grew single plants of eight invasive and eight native species in pots with substrate polluted with 0, 1, 3 and 6 types of microplastics. 

We found that the growth suppression by microplastic pollution became stronger with the number of microplastic types the plants were exposed to. This tended to be particularly the case for invasive species, as their biomass advantage over natives diminished with the number of microplastic types. The biomass responses coincided with a positive effect of the number of microplastic types on root allocation and thickness, which was also stronger for invasive than for native species. In addition, the results of hierarchical diversity-interaction models suggest that the negative impact of microplastic diversity on the total biomass of invasive plant species was influenced by both the identities of the microplastic and certain types of microplastic with strong pairwise interactions. In contrast, the effect on native species was determined solely by the microplastic identities. 

Synthesis: Our multi-species study thus shows for the first time that the negative effects of microplastic pollution on plant growth increase with the number of microplastic types. We also found tentative evidence that the negative impacts of microplastic diversity were more pronounced for invasive plants compared to native plants, and that this might be due to differences in the responses of root allocation and thickness.</dcterms:abstract>
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