Morella cerifera invasion and nitrogen cycling on a lowland Hawaiian lava flow

被引:0
|
作者
Erin L. Kurten
Carolyn P. Snyder
Terri Iwata
Peter M. Vitousek
机构
[1] Stanford University,Department of Biological Sciences
来源
Biological Invasions | 2008年 / 10卷
关键词
Hawai‘i; invasive species; Nitrogen cycling; Succession; Tropical forest;
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摘要
Invasive plants that fix nitrogen can alter nutrient availability and thereby community dynamics and successional trajectories of native communities they colonize. Morella cerifera (Myricaceae) is a symbiotic nitrogen fixer originally from the southeastern U.S. that is colonizing native-dominated vegetation on a young lava flow near Hilo, Island of Hawai‘i, where it increases total and biologically available soil nitrogen and increases foliar nitrogen concentrations in associated individuals of the native tree Metrosideros polymorpha. This invasion has the potential to alter the few remaining native-dominated lowland forest ecosystems in windward Hawai‘i.
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页码:19 / 24
页数:5
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