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Yanjie Liu

Publications

  • Soil mesofauna may buffer the negative effects of drought on alien plant invasion
  • Increases in multiple resources promote plant invasion
  • Drivers of the negative diversity-invasibility relationship: nutrient availablity, allelopathy, soil biota and soil legacy effects
  • The Matthew effect: Common species become more common and rare ones become more rare in response to artificial light at night
  • Data from: Biomass responses of widely and less-widely naturalized alien plants to artificial light at night
  • Habitat-specific differences in plasticity of foliar δ13C in temperate steppe grasses
  • Data from: Responses of common and rare aliens and natives to nutrient availability and fluctuations
  • Nutrient enrichment promotes invasion success of alien plants via increased growth and suppression of chemical defenses
  • Increase in nutrient availability promotes success of invasive plants through increasing growth and decreasing anti-herbivory defenses
  • Soil microbes mediate the effects of environmental variability on plant invasion
  • Do invasive alien plants benefit more from global environmental change than native plants?
  • The importance of phenotypic plasticity for plant success under environmental change
  • Foliar δ13C response patterns along a moisture gradient arising from genetic variation and phenotypic plasticity in grassland species of Inner Mongolia
  • Effect of allelopathy on plant performance
  • Does greater specific leaf area plasticity help plants to maintain a high performance when shaded?
  • How Will Global Environmental Changes Affect the Growth of Alien Plants?
  • Responses of common and rare aliens and natives to nutrient availability and fluctuations
  • Effects of nitrogen addition and mowing on reproductive phenology of three early-flowering forb species in a Tibetan alpine meadow
  • Understanding the wide geographic range of a clonal perennial grass: plasticity versus local adaptation
  • Effects of sampling method on foliar δ13C of Leymus chinensis at different scales
  • Responses of invasive and native plants to different forms and availability of phosphorus
  • Invasive herbaceous respond more negatively to elevated ozone concentration than native species
  • Invasive plants have greater growth than co‐occurring natives in live soil subjected to a drought‐rewetting treatment
  • A native herbaceous community exerts a strong allelopathic effect on the woody range-expanderBetula fruticosa
  • The effects of changes in water and nitrogen availability on alien plant invasion into a stand of a native grassland species
  • Widely naturalized species are not more promiscuous in the use of different nitrogen forms, but benefit more from inorganic nitrogen
  • Herbivory may mediate the effects of nutrients on the dominance of alien plants
  • Increases in multiple resources promote competitive ability of naturalized non-native plants
  • The more synthetic polymer types pollute the soil, the stronger the growth suppression of invasive alien and native plants
  • Opposite effects of nutrient enrichment and an invasive snail on the growth of invasive and native macrophytes
  • Soil-microorganism-mediated invasional meltdown in plants
  • Live soil ameliorated the negative effects of biodegradable but not non-biodegradable microplastics on the growth of plant communities
  • Artificial light at night advances reproductive phenology and reduces reproductive capacity of a wild plant
  • Evidence for Elton's diversity–invasibility hypothesis from belowground
  • Effect of allelopathy on plant performance: a meta‐analysis
  • Increases and fluctuations in nutrient availability do not promote dominance of alien plants in synthetic communities of common natives
  • Nitrogen acquisition of Central European herbaceous plants that differ in their global naturalization success
  • Soil microbes mediate the effects of resource variability on plant invasion
  • Widely naturalized species are not more promiscuous to different nitrogen forms, but benefit more from inorganic nitrogen
  • Effects of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi on plant invasion success driven by nitrogen fluctuations
  • Herbivory and elevated levels of CO2 and nutrients separately, rather than synergistically, impacted biomass production and allocation in invasive and native plant species
  • Perspectives of invasive alien species management in China
  • Biomass responses of widely and less‐widely naturalized alien plants to artificial light at night
  • Suppression of a plant hormone gibberellin reduces growth of invasive plants more than native plants
  • Soil fauna may buffer the negative effects of drought on alien plant invasion
  • Interactive effects of herbivory and the level and fluctuations of nutrient availability on dominance of alien plants in synthetic native communities
  • Opposite effects of nutrient enrichment and herbivory by an alien snail on growth of an invasive macrophyte and native macrophytes
  • Matthew effect: common species become more common and rare ones become more rare in response to artificial light at night
  • The more microplastic types pollute the soil, the stronger the growth suppression of invasive alien and native plants
  • Plant invasions under artificial light at night
  • A native herbaceous community exerts a strong allelopathic effect on the woody range-expander Betula fruticosa
  • Invasive plant species support each other's growth in low‐nutrient conditions but compete when nutrients are abundant
  • Soil biota modulate the effects of microplastics on biomass and diversity of plant communities
  • Microplastic diversity increases the abundance of antibiotic resistance genes in soil
  • Investigating the drivers of negative diversity-invasibility relationship: The role of nutrient availability, allelopathy, soil biota, and soil legacy effects
  • Additive Effects of Multiple Global Change Factors on Plant Invasions Are Common
  • Plant invasion resistance due to 2D native diversity
  • Drainage and nitrogen enrichment facilitate the encroachment of woody plants at various developmental stages in freshwater marshes
  • Nutrient enrichment and interspecific competition modulate growth performance of invasive plant species regardless of nematodes

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