The long-term effects of invasive earthworms on plant community composition and diversity in a hardwood forest in northern Minnesota.

Q3 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Plant-environment interactions (Hoboken, N.J.) Pub Date : 2022-04-21 eCollection Date: 2022-04-01 DOI:10.1002/pei3.10075
Genevieve Alexander, John Almendinger, Peter White
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Abstract

Nonnative European earthworms are invading hardwood forests of the Chippewa National Forest, MN. While effects on plant communities at the leading edge of invasion have been studied, little is known about longer-term effects of invasive earthworms. We applied a model using historic O-horizon soil thickness and a chronosequence approach to classify 41 hardwood sites in the Chippewa National Forest as "long-term wormed" (wormed >2 decades), "short-term wormed" or "unwormed/lightly wormed." Graminoids, especially Carex pensylvanica, had the greatest mean percent cover in sites that had been wormed for over two decades. The families with the greatest negative change in mean percent cover after over two decades of earthworm invasion were Asteraceae, Violaceae, and Sapindaceae (specifically Acer species). Across all diversity metrics measured, long-term wormed sites had the lowest understory plant species diversity, short-term wormed sites had intermediate diversity, and unwormed/lightly wormed sites exhibited the highest diversity. Long-term wormed sites had the lowest mean species richness across all sample scales (1-1024 m2). The greatest within-group compositional dissimilarity occurred at sites that had been wormed for over two decades, suggesting that sites that had been wormed for over two decades have not reached a compositionally similar end-state "wormed" community type. Our study suggests that understory diversity will decrease as hardwood forest stands become wormed over time. While our results support other findings that exotic earthworm invasion is associated with lower understory plant diversity in hardwood forests, our study was the first to use space-for-time substitution to document the effects after multiple decades of earthworm invasion.

入侵蚯蚓对明尼苏达州北部硬木森林植物群落组成和多样性的长期影响。
欧洲外来蚯蚓正在入侵明尼苏达州奇佩瓦国家森林的硬木森林。虽然已经研究了入侵前沿对植物群落的影响,但对入侵蚯蚓的长期影响却知之甚少。我们利用历史上的 O-horizon 土壤厚度和时序法建立了一个模型,将奇佩瓦国家森林中的 41 个硬木地点分为 "长期虫害"(虫害超过 20 年)、"短期虫害 "或 "无虫害/轻度虫害"。在驱虫时间超过 20 年的地点,禾本科植物,尤其是 Carex pensylvanica 的平均覆盖率最高。蚯蚓入侵超过二十年后,平均覆盖率变化最大的科是菊科、堇菜科和无患子科(特别是槭树种)。在测量的所有多样性指标中,长期驱虫地点的林下植物物种多样性最低,短期驱虫地点的多样性居中,未驱虫/轻度驱虫地点的多样性最高。在所有样本规模(1-1024 平方米)中,长期驱虫地点的平均物种丰富度最低。群落内部组成差异最大的是驱虫时间超过 20 年的地点,这表明驱虫时间超过 20 年的地点并没有达到组成相似的最终状态 "驱虫 "群落类型。我们的研究表明,随着时间的推移,硬木林分被虫蛀后,林下多样性会减少。虽然我们的研究结果支持外来蚯蚓入侵与硬木林林下植物多样性降低有关的其他研究结果,但我们的研究是首次使用空间-时间替代法来记录蚯蚓入侵几十年后的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
15 weeks
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