4.4 Article

Belowground advantages in construction cost facilitate a cryptic plant invasion

Journal

AOB PLANTS
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aobpla/plu020

Keywords

Carbon dioxide; common reed; construction cost; eutrophication; intraspecific; invasion ecology; Phragmites; plant functional traits; rhizomes; wetlands

Funding

  1. Bucher-Jackson fellowship through Bryn Mawr College
  2. Smithsonian Institution fellowship
  3. National Science Foundation [DEB-0950080]
  4. Maryland Sea Grant [SA7528114-WW]
  5. Bryn Mawr College
  6. Division Of Environmental Biology
  7. Direct For Biological Sciences [0950080] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The energetic cost of plant organ construction is a functional trait that is useful for understanding carbon investment during growth (e.g. the resource acquisition vs. tissue longevity tradeoff), as well as in response to global change factors like elevated CO2 and N. Despite the enormous importance of roots and rhizomes in acquiring soil resources and responding to global change, construction costs have been studied almost exclusively in leaves. We sought to determine how construction costs of aboveground and belowground organs differed between native and introduced lineages of a geographically widely dispersed wetland plant species (Phragmites australis) under varying levels of CO2 and N. We grew plants under ambient and elevated atmospheric CO2, as well as under two levels of soil nitrogen. We determined construction costs for leaves, stems, rhizomes and roots, as well as for whole plants. Across all treatment conditions, the introduced lineage of Phragmites had a 4.3% lower mean rhizome construction cost than the native. Whole-plant construction costs were also smaller for the introduced lineage, with the largest difference in sample means (3.3%) occurring under ambient conditions. In having lower rhizome and plant-scale construction costs, the introduced lineage can recoup its investment in tissue construction more quickly, enabling it to generate additional biomass with the same energetic investment. Our results suggest that introduced Phragmites has had an advantageous tissue investment strategy under historic CO2 and N levels, which has facilitated key rhizome processes, such as clonal spread. We recommend that construction costs for multiple organ types be included in future studies of plant carbon economy, especially those investigating global change.

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