4.7 Article

Negative effects of an allelopathic invader on AM fungal plant species drive community-level responses

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 102, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3201

Keywords

allelopathy; Alliaria petiolata; arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi; community change; garlic mustard; invasion impacts; long‐ term experiment; mutualism disruption; symbiosis

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Long Term Research in Environmental Biology (LTREB) [NSF DEB 0958676, NSF DEB 1457531, NSF DEB 144552]
  2. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
  3. NSF Graduate Research Internship
  4. Invasive Species Program of the U.S. Geological Survey

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The impact of garlic mustard removal on the plant community composition supports the hypothesis of disruption of mutualistic interactions, especially for mycorrhizal plant species. This demonstrates that allelochemical producing invaders can significantly alter the community composition by disproportionately affecting mycorrhizal plant species.
The mechanisms causing invasive species impact are rarely empirically tested, limiting our ability to understand and predict subsequent changes in invaded plant communities. Invader disruption of native mutualistic interactions is a mechanism expected to have negative effects on native plant species. Specifically, disruption of native plant-fungal mutualisms may provide non-mycorrhizal plant invaders an advantage over mycorrhizal native plants. Invasive Alliaria petiolata (garlic mustard) produces secondary chemicals toxic to soil microorganisms including mycorrhizal fungi, and is known to induce physiological stress and reduce population growth rates of native forest understory plant species. Here, we report on a 11-yr manipulative field experiment in replicated forest plots testing if the effects of removal of garlic mustard on the plant community support the mutualism disruption hypothesis within the entire understory herbaceous community. We compare community responses for two functional groups: the mycorrhizal vs. the non-mycorrhizal plant communities. Our results show that garlic mustard weeding alters the community composition, decreases community evenness, and increases the abundance of understory herbs that associate with mycorrhizal fungi. Conversely, garlic mustard has no significant effects on the non-mycorrhizal plant community. Consistent with the mutualism disruption hypothesis, our results demonstrate that allelochemical producing invaders modify the plant community by disproportionately impacting mycorrhizal plant species. We also demonstrate the importance of incorporating causal mechanisms of biological invasion to elucidate patterns and predict community-level responses.

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