An Invasive Shrub’s Seasonal Grip on a Mountain Carbon Budget
A new study in New Zealand’s montane tussock grasslands reveals that the invasive shrub Calluna vulgaris (heather) dominates ecosystem carbon uptake, with its influence peaking early in the growing season. Researchers measured net ecosystem exchange, gross primary productivity, and ecosystem respiration across the season in plots where the shrub was either present or removed, with some plots also subjected to experimental warming. The removal of C. vulgaris significantly weakened the ecosystem’s carbon sink strength by reducing overall productivity, independent of changes in total plant biomass. While warming enhanced carbon uptake in native-only communities, it did not have the same effect in invaded plots, highlighting the complex interplay between biological invasions and climate change on nutrient cycling and ecosystem services.
Study Significance: This research demonstrates that invasive species can exert a disproportionate, seasonally variable control over carbon dynamics, a critical factor for accurate ecological modeling and climate projections. For conservation biologists and landscape ecologists, these findings underscore the need to account for invasive species’ phenology and carbon sequestration impact when planning restoration projects or modeling ecosystem resilience. The work provides a mechanistic understanding of how species interactions directly alter biogeochemical cycles, which is essential for predicting the consequences of habitat fragmentation and biodiversity loss under global change.
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