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Phenotypic plasticity of light use favors a plant invader in nitrogen-enriched ecosystems
Phenotypic plasticity of light use favors a plant invader in nitrogen-enriched ecosystems
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Phenotypic plasticity of light use favors a plant invader in nitrogen-enriched ecosystems
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Phenotypic plasticity of light use favors a plant invader in nitrogen-enriched ecosystems
Phenotypic plasticity of light use favors a plant invader in nitrogen-enriched ecosystems

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Phenotypic plasticity of light use favors a plant invader in nitrogen-enriched ecosystems
Phenotypic plasticity of light use favors a plant invader in nitrogen-enriched ecosystems
Journal Article

Phenotypic plasticity of light use favors a plant invader in nitrogen-enriched ecosystems

2022
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Overview
Eutrophication is believed to promote plant invasion, resulting in high growth performances of invasive plants and, therefore, the great potential for growth-induced intraspecific competition for light. Current hypotheses predict how eutrophication promotes plant invasion but fail to explain how great invasiveness is maintained under eutrophic conditions. In diverse native communities, co-occurring plants of varying sizes can avoid light competition by exploiting light complementarily; however, whether this mechanism applies to intraspecific competition in invasive plant populations remains unknown. Using a 2-year field nitrogen (N)-enrichment experiment on one of the global invasive plants, Spartina alterniflora, we found that the plasticity of light use reduced intraspecific competition and increased biomass production in S. alterniflora. This plasticity effect was enhanced when S. alterniflora had no nutrient limitations. In the N-enrichment treatments, the height difference among S. alterniflora ramets increased as light intensity decreased under the canopy. Compared with ambient N, under N enrichment, shorter individuals increased their light-use efficiency and specific leaf area in response to the reduced light intensity under the canopy. However, such ecophysiological plasticity was not found for taller individuals. Our findings revealed that the light-use plasticity of short individuals can be envisaged as a novel mechanism by which an invasive plant alleviates intraspecific competition and increases its invasiveness, challenging the prevailing perspective that the invasiveness of exotic plants is constrained by intraspecific competition.