Integrative Biology Journals

Plant Diversity ›› 2026, Vol. 48 ›› Issue (02): 389-398.DOI: 10.1016/j.pld.2025.06.007

• Articles • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Stage-dependent shifts in native and invasive traits mediate community invasibility in subtropical urban ecosystems

Chengwei Lia, Qi Wua, Cheng Dua, Laihong Gua, Xingchen Wanga, Jiajie Xiea, Jiayi Wangb, Jianhua Chena, Yunquan Wanga,c   

  1. a. College of Life Sciences, Zhejiang Normal University, Jinhua 321004, Zhejiang, China;
    b. School of Life Science and Technology, Shanghai Tech University, Shanghai 201210, China;
    c. State Key Laboratory for Vegetation Structure, Function and Construction, College of Life Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, Zhejiang, China
  • Received:2025-04-15 Revised:2025-06-13 Online:2026-05-19 Published:2026-03-25
  • Contact: Yunquan Wang,E-mail:yqwang@vip.126.com
  • Supported by:
    We gratefully acknowledge the financial support provided by Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China (LQ22C030001) and the Jindong Economic Specialty Products Station, Jinhua, Zhejiang Province. Additionally, we extend our appreciation to the anonymous students from Zhejiang Normal University for their invaluable contributions to the field surveys and lab measurement conducted as part of this study.

Stage-dependent shifts in native and invasive traits mediate community invasibility in subtropical urban ecosystems

Chengwei Lia, Qi Wua, Cheng Dua, Laihong Gua, Xingchen Wanga, Jiajie Xiea, Jiayi Wangb, Jianhua Chena, Yunquan Wanga,c   

  1. a. College of Life Sciences, Zhejiang Normal University, Jinhua 321004, Zhejiang, China;
    b. School of Life Science and Technology, Shanghai Tech University, Shanghai 201210, China;
    c. State Key Laboratory for Vegetation Structure, Function and Construction, College of Life Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, Zhejiang, China
  • 通讯作者: Yunquan Wang,E-mail:yqwang@vip.126.com
  • 基金资助:
    We gratefully acknowledge the financial support provided by Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China (LQ22C030001) and the Jindong Economic Specialty Products Station, Jinhua, Zhejiang Province. Additionally, we extend our appreciation to the anonymous students from Zhejiang Normal University for their invaluable contributions to the field surveys and lab measurement conducted as part of this study.

Abstract: Biological invasions threaten biodiversity and ecosystem stability through stage-dependent functional trait mediation. However, the mechanistic linkages between invasion intensity and multidimensional functional traits remain inadequately characterized. To address this gap, we analyzed eight multidimensional functional traits across 290 subtropical herbaceous plots in Jinhua, China. By integrating invasion level, we evaluated how native and invasive species traits differentially regulate community invasibility, a metric quantifying a community’s susceptibility to biological invasion. Functional and taxonomic diversity exhibited hump-shaped patterns, peaking at moderate invasion before declining sharply under heavy invasion, while community invasibility increased markedly with invasion level. Native communities resisted invasion through persistent suppression of canopy height and stage-adaptive strategies: Leaf thickness emerged as a critical resistance trait under heavy invasion, counteracting invasive dominance. In contrast, invasive species initially prioritized rapid canopy occupation via height-mediated advantages, subsequently shifting toward stress tolerance (e.g., thickened leaves) and resource reallocation (e.g., root-shoot ratio adjustments) to consolidate dominance. Native abundance universally suppressed invasibility across all invasion stages, whereas invasive abundance amplified success only at advanced stages. Resistance was governed by stage-dependent trait trade-offs: Native leaf dry weight enhanced invasibility under light invasion but became ineffective as competition intensified. Conversely, invasive aboveground biomass and root-shoot ratio consistently promoted invasibility, reflecting prioritization of rapid resource acquisition. Our findings demonstrate that invasion outcomes depend on the spatiotemporal coordination of multidimensional functional traits. We propose an adaptive management framework for urban ecosystems emphasizing structural preservation (e.g., maintaining native canopy height) combined with stage-specific trait optimization of resistance traits to mitigate invasibility.

Key words: Biological invasion dynamics, Multidimensional functional traits, Trait-mediated biotic resistance, Stage-dependent coordination strategies, Subtropical urban ecosystems

摘要: Biological invasions threaten biodiversity and ecosystem stability through stage-dependent functional trait mediation. However, the mechanistic linkages between invasion intensity and multidimensional functional traits remain inadequately characterized. To address this gap, we analyzed eight multidimensional functional traits across 290 subtropical herbaceous plots in Jinhua, China. By integrating invasion level, we evaluated how native and invasive species traits differentially regulate community invasibility, a metric quantifying a community’s susceptibility to biological invasion. Functional and taxonomic diversity exhibited hump-shaped patterns, peaking at moderate invasion before declining sharply under heavy invasion, while community invasibility increased markedly with invasion level. Native communities resisted invasion through persistent suppression of canopy height and stage-adaptive strategies: Leaf thickness emerged as a critical resistance trait under heavy invasion, counteracting invasive dominance. In contrast, invasive species initially prioritized rapid canopy occupation via height-mediated advantages, subsequently shifting toward stress tolerance (e.g., thickened leaves) and resource reallocation (e.g., root-shoot ratio adjustments) to consolidate dominance. Native abundance universally suppressed invasibility across all invasion stages, whereas invasive abundance amplified success only at advanced stages. Resistance was governed by stage-dependent trait trade-offs: Native leaf dry weight enhanced invasibility under light invasion but became ineffective as competition intensified. Conversely, invasive aboveground biomass and root-shoot ratio consistently promoted invasibility, reflecting prioritization of rapid resource acquisition. Our findings demonstrate that invasion outcomes depend on the spatiotemporal coordination of multidimensional functional traits. We propose an adaptive management framework for urban ecosystems emphasizing structural preservation (e.g., maintaining native canopy height) combined with stage-specific trait optimization of resistance traits to mitigate invasibility.

关键词: Biological invasion dynamics, Multidimensional functional traits, Trait-mediated biotic resistance, Stage-dependent coordination strategies, Subtropical urban ecosystems