Interannual climate variability mediates changes in carbon and nitrogen
pools caused by annual grass invasion in a semi-arid shrubland
Abstract
Exotic plant invasions alter ecosystem properties and threaten ecosystem
functions globally. Interannual climate variability (ICV) influences
both plant community composition (PCC) and soil properties, and
interactions between ICV and PCC may influence nitrogen (N) and carbon
(C) pools. We asked how ICV and non-native annual grass invasion covary
to influence soil and plant N and C in a semiarid shrubland undergoing
widespread ecosystem transformation due to invasions and altered fire
regimes. We sampled four progressive stages of annual grass invasion at
20 sites across a large (25,000 km2) landscape for
plant community composition, plant tissue N and C, and soil total N and
C in 2013 and 2016, which followed two years of dry and two years of wet
conditions, respectively. Multivariate analyses and ANOVAs showed that
in invasion stages where native shrub and perennial grass and forb
communities were replaced by annual grass-dominated communities, the
ecosystem lost more soil N and C in wet years. Path analysis showed that
high water availability led to higher herbaceous cover in all invasion
stages. In stages with native shrubs and perennial grasses, higher
perennial grass cover was associated with increased soil C and N, while
in annual-dominated stages, higher annual grass cover was associated
with losses of soil C and N. Also, soil total C and C:N ratios were more
homogenous in annual-dominated invasion stages as indicated by
within-site standard deviations. Loss of native shrubs and perennial
grasses and forbs coupled with annual grass invasion may lead to
long-term declines in soil N and C and hamper restoration efforts.
Restoration strategies that use innovative techniques and novel species
to address increasing temperatures and ICV and emphasize maintaining
plant community structure – shrubs, grasses, and forbs – will allow
sagebrush ecosystems to maintain C sequestration, soil fertility and
soil heterogeneity.