Different resource-use strategies of invasive and native woody species from a seasonally dry tropical forest under drought stress and recovery

2020 
Abstract Exotic plants in semiarid region have developed strategies for efficient use or capture of resources. They have become invasive and outperform native species. To understand which factors could explain the success of invasive woody species in a semiarid region, several physiological traits were analyzed in young plants of two invasive and two native species exposed to different water availability. Invasive plants showed low leaf construction cost, high phosphorus and nitrogen contents, reduced loss of instantaneous energy use efficiency, and smaller specific leaf area when compared to native species. This strategy led to a higher biomass gain and a high root/shoot ratio in both water treatments. After rehydration, invasive plants showed faster recovery and higher rates of CO2 assimilation. This resilience is fundamental for species in semiarid regions, and also increase uptake of nutrients. Maintaining a high photosynthetic rate, whenever there is water availability is a strategy that increases the performance of the species in relation to biomass gain. The low leaf construction cost and the fast recovery of the photosynthetic metabolism of invasive plants after limiting water resources explains the success of these species, and suggests that their potential may increase under prolonged and severe drought seasons.
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