4.6 Article

Intraspecific differences of Asian/Australian Phragmites australis subgroups reveal no potentially invasive traits

Journal

HYDROBIOLOGIA
Volume 848, Issue 14, Pages 3331-3351

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10750-020-04474-w

Keywords

Climate change; Common gardens; Functional traits; Phenotypic plasticity; Plant invasion; Yellow River Delta

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2016YFE0109600]
  2. Ministry of Land and Resources program: Special foundation for scientific research on public causes [201111023]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41240022, 40872167, 31970347, 31770361]
  4. China Geological Survey [DD20189503, GZH201200503]
  5. Sino-Danish Center for Education and Research (SDC)
  6. Carlsberg Foundation [CF15-0330]

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The study compares the performance of different subgroups of Phragmites australis from China and Australia in common gardens in China. Results indicate that the Australian subgroup (FEAU) has lower invasive potential and weaker response to the environment compared to the Chinese subgroups.
Phragmites australis is a cosmopolitan plant species with high intraspecific diversity and phenotypic plasticity. Due to its variability and large ecological niche breadth, subgroups of P. australis have become invasive in North America, and this invasion has been recognized late. While this cryptic invasion on the American continent has received much attention, little is known about the potential invasiveness of other subgroups, especially within Asian/Australian P. australis. We therefore compared the performance of three subgroups within the Asian/Australian group: a freshwater (CN) and an estuarine (YRD) subgroup collected in China and a genetically closely related subgroup collected from Australia (FEAU), grown in two common gardens in China. Our results showed that the FEAU subgroup had no strong invasive potential, as its total biomass, height, shoot number, specific leaf area, and stomatal conductance were lower than that of the two native subgroups. All three subgroups responded similarly with most traits to the different climates of the gardens, albeit with different response strength, expressed as phenotypic plasticity indices. The potential cryptic invasion risk of the FEAU subgroup in China seems to be low, since its functional traits showed low competitiveness and most traits with the lowest plasticity occurred in FEAU. However, caution is still advised, because other invasive mechanisms, such as enemy release or the performance under extreme environmental conditions were not tested in our study.

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