Abstract

Introduced species may homogenize biotic communities. Whether this homogenization can erase latitudinal patterns of species diversity and composition has not been well studied. We examined this by comparing nematode and microbial communities in stands of native Phragmites australis and exotic Spartina alterniflora in coastal wetlands across 18° of latitude in China. We found clear latitudinal clines in nematode diversity and functional composition, and in microbial composition, for soils collected from native P.australis. These latitudinal patterns were weak or absent for soils collected from nearby stands of the exotic S.alterniflora. Climatic and edaphic variables varied across latitude in similar ways in both community types. In P.australis there were strong correlations between community structure and environmental variables, whereas in S.alterniflora these correlations were weak. These results suggest that the invasion of S.alterniflora into the Chinese coastal wetlands has caused profound biotic homogenization of soil communities across latitude. We speculate that the variation in P.australis nematode and microbial communities across latitude is primarily driven by geographic variation in plant traits, but that such variation in plant traits is largely lacking for the recently introduced exotic S.alterniflora. These results indicate that widespread exotic species can homogenize nematode communities at large spatial scales.

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