Data from: Increases and fluctuations in nutrient availability do not promote dominance of alien plants in synthetic communities of common natives

dc.contributor.authorLiu, Yanjie
dc.contributor.authorZhang, Xiaoqi
dc.contributor.authorvan Kleunen, Mark
dc.date.accessioned2025-12-16T15:18:17Z
dc.date.available2025-12-16T15:18:17Z
dc.date.created2018-08-13T13:24:37Z
dc.date.issued2021-08-13
dc.description.abstract1. It is frequently thought that global environmental changes, and especially the concomitant changes in environmental variability, could further increase the success of invasive species in native resident communities. However, very few studies explicitly tested this, and it remains unknown whether invasive and non-invasive alien species respond differently to resource fluctuations in resident communities. 2. We grew ten invasive and ten non-invasive species as target species in pot-mesocosms with four different synthetic native resident communities under six nutrient treatments differing in overall nutrient availability and temporal fluctuations in nutrient supply (constant low, constant high, gradual increasing, gradual decreasing, single large pulse, multiple smaller pulses). With the exception of plants in the constant low treatment, the plants were supplied the same total amount of nutrients during the experiment. We tested whether high nutrient availability and fluctuations in nutrient supply increased performance of both invasive and non-invasive alien plants within native resident communities, and whether invasive ones benefited more than non-invasive ones. 3. We found that the increase in biomass in response to nutrient addition was stronger for invasive than for non-invasive alien species. However, as the native competitors benefited even more from nutrient addition, the relative biomass of the alien target plant species, particularly the non-invasive ones, decreased. When the nutrient supply gradually increased, biomass of alien targets as well as native competitors decreased compared to the plants in the constant nutrient supply treatment. Surprisingly, when nutrients were supplied as a single large pulse, the absolute and relative biomass of the alien target plants decreased. The reduction in relative biomass was even stronger for invasive than for non-invasive alien species, and a similar pattern was found when nutrients were supplied as multiple smaller pulses. 4. Our results confirm previous findings that invasive alien species benefit more from nutrient addition than non-invasive alien species. However, in contrast to previous findings, our results suggest that nutrient fluctuations can suppress biomass of alien plants relative to that of natives, at least when the natives are themselves very successful, common species.
dc.description.versionpublisheddeu
dc.identifier.doi10.5061/dryad.9jj4f50
dc.identifier.urihttps://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/75537
dc.language.isoeng
dc.rightsCreative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode
dc.subjectAmaranthus retroflexus
dc.subjectLupinus polyphyllus
dc.subjectCynosurus cristatus
dc.subjectAnthoxanthum odoratum
dc.subjectPlantago lanceolata
dc.subjectSedum spurium
dc.subjectCerastium tomentosum
dc.subjectLolium multiflorum
dc.subjectVeronica persica
dc.subjectSolidago canadensis
dc.subjectAlopecurus pratensis
dc.subjectGalium album
dc.subjectEnvironmental variability
dc.subjectBromus squarrosus
dc.subjectBidens frondosa
dc.subjectLepidium heterophyllum
dc.subjectVeronica peregrina
dc.subjectLupinus albus
dc.subjectLolium perenne
dc.subjectBidens connata
dc.subjectSilene gallica
dc.subjectSedum ochroleucum
dc.subjectBromus hordeaceus
dc.subjectSolidago graminifolia
dc.subjectSalvia aethiopis
dc.subjectDiplotaxis tenuifolia
dc.subjectLeucanthemum ircutianum
dc.subjectPoa pratensis
dc.subjectFestuca guestfalica
dc.subjectplant-plant interactions
dc.subjectPrunella vulgaris
dc.subjectSalvia verticillata
dc.subjectnative community
dc.subjectHolocene
dc.subjectAmaranthus graecizans
dc.subjectDactylis glomerata
dc.subject.ddc570
dc.titleData from: Increases and fluctuations in nutrient availability do not promote dominance of alien plants in synthetic communities of common nativeseng
dspace.entity.typeDataset
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kops.citation.iso690LIU, Yanjie, Xiaoqi ZHANG, Mark VAN KLEUNEN, 2021. Data from: Increases and fluctuations in nutrient availability do not promote dominance of alien plants in synthetic communities of common nativesdeu
kops.citation.iso690LIU, Yanjie, Xiaoqi ZHANG, Mark VAN KLEUNEN, 2021. Data from: Increases and fluctuations in nutrient availability do not promote dominance of alien plants in synthetic communities of common nativeseng
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2. We grew ten invasive and ten non-invasive species as target species in pot-mesocosms with four different synthetic native resident communities under six nutrient treatments differing in overall nutrient availability and temporal fluctuations in nutrient supply (constant low, constant high, gradual increasing, gradual decreasing, single large pulse, multiple smaller pulses). With the exception of plants in the constant low treatment, the plants were supplied the same total amount of nutrients during the experiment. We tested whether high nutrient availability and fluctuations in nutrient supply increased performance of both invasive and non-invasive alien plants within native resident communities, and whether invasive ones benefited more than non-invasive ones. 
3. We found that the increase in biomass in response to nutrient addition was stronger for invasive than for non-invasive alien species. However, as the native competitors benefited even more from nutrient addition, the relative biomass of the alien target plant species, particularly the non-invasive ones, decreased. When the nutrient supply gradually increased, biomass of alien targets as well as native competitors decreased compared to the plants in the constant nutrient supply treatment. Surprisingly, when nutrients were supplied as a single large pulse, the absolute and relative biomass of the alien target plants decreased. The reduction in relative biomass was even stronger for invasive than for non-invasive alien species, and a similar pattern was found when nutrients were supplied as multiple smaller pulses. 
4. Our results confirm previous findings that invasive alien species benefit more from nutrient addition than non-invasive alien species. However, in contrast to previous findings, our results suggest that nutrient fluctuations can suppress biomass of alien plants relative to that of natives, at least when the natives are themselves very successful, common species.</dcterms:abstract>
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