4.5 Article

Native and non-native grasses generate common types of plant-soil feedbacks by altering soil nutrients and microbial communities

Journal

OIKOS
Volume 122, Issue 2, Pages 199-208

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2012.20592.x

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Funding

  1. US Department of Energy [DE-AC07-06ID14680]
  2. Nevada Agricultural Experiment Station

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Soil conditioning occurs when plants alter features of their soil environment. When these alterations affect subsequent plant growth, it is a plant soil feedback. Plantsoil feedbacks are an important and understudied aspect of abovegroundbelowground linkages in plant ecology that influence plant coexistence, invasion and restoration. Here, we examine plantsoil feedback dynamics of seven co-occurring native and non-native grass species to address the questions of how plants modify their soil environment, do those modifications inhibit or favor their own species relative to other species, and do non-natives exhibit different plantsoil feedback dynamics than natives. We used a two-phase design, wherein a first generation of plants was grown to induce species-specific changes in the soil and a second generation of plants was used as a bioassay to determine the effects of those changes. We also used path-analysis to examine the potential chain of effects of the first generation on soil nutrients and soil microbial composition and on bioassay plant performance. Our findings show species-specific (rather than consistent within groups of natives and non-natives) soil conditioning effects on both soil nutrients and the soil microbial community by plants. Additionally, native species produced plantsoil feedback types that benefit other species more than themselves and non-native invasive species tended to produce plantsoil feedback types that benefit themselves more than other species. These results, coupled with previous field observations, support hypotheses that plantsoil feedbacks may be a mechanism by which some non-native species increase their invasive potential and plantsoil feedbacks may influence the vulnerability of a site to invasion.

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