4.8 Article

Biological invasions and climate change amplify each other's effects on dryland degradation

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 28, 期 1, 页码 285-295

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15919

关键词

biological invasion; climate change; desertification; drought; global change; invasive grasses

资金

  1. Philecology Foundation of Fort Worth, Texas
  2. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, McIntire Stennis [ARZT--1390130--M12--222]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Climate models predict increasingly hot conditions and more frequent droughts in arid regions. Rapid vegetation change, particularly invasive grasses, is occurring. Experimental results showed invasive grasses have higher tolerance to drought and warming compared to native grasses, indicating a potential impact of climate change and biological invasion on ecosystem degradation.
Climate models predict that, in the coming decades, many arid regions will experience increasingly hot conditions and will be affected more frequently by drought. These regions are also experiencing rapid vegetation change, notably invasion by exotic grasses. Invasive grasses spread rapidly into native desert ecosystems due, in particular, to interannual variability in precipitation and periodic fires. The resultant destruction of non-fire-adapted native shrub and grass communities and of the inherent soil resource heterogeneity can yield invader-dominated grasslands. Moreover, recurrent droughts are expected to cause widespread physiological stress and mortality of both invasive and native plants, as well as the loss of soil resources. However, the magnitude of these effects may differ between invasive and native grasses, especially under warmer conditions, rendering the trajectory of vegetated communities uncertain. Using the Biosphere 2 facility in the Sonoran Desert, we evaluated the viability of these hypothesized relationships by simulating combinations of drought and elevated temperature (+5 degrees C) and assessing the ecophysiological and mortality responses of both a dominant invasive grass (Pennisetum ciliare or buffelgrass) and a dominant native grass (Heteropogan contortus or tanglehead). While both grasses survived protracted drought at ambient temperatures by inducing dormancy, drought under warmed conditions exceeded the tolerance limits of the native species, resulting in greater and more rapid mortality than exhibited by the invasive. Thus, two major drivers of global environmental change, biological invasion and climate change, can be expected to synergistically accelerate ecosystem degradation unless large-scale interventions are enacted.

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