4.6 Article

Soil biotic and abiotic effects on seedling growth exhibit context-dependent interactions: evidence from a multi-country experiment on Pinus contorta invasion

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 232, Issue 1, Pages 303-317

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.17449

Keywords

abiotic; context-dependent; ectomycorrhizas; enhanced mutualism hypothesis; enemy release hypothesis; invasive; missed mutualism hypothesis; plant-soil feedback

Categories

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsradet
  2. Project VR) [2016-03819]
  3. Fondecyt [1140485, 1190900]
  4. New Zealand Ministry for Business, Innovation and Employment through the Winning Against Wildings endeavour program
  5. CONICYT [PIA AFB170008]
  6. Vinnova [2016-03819] Funding Source: Vinnova
  7. Swedish Research Council [2016-03819] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council

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This study found that soil abiotic factors play a key role in the success of invasive plants. The origin of soil, both native and introduced, significantly influences the growth of invasive Pinus contorta, supporting the missed mutualism hypothesis.
The success of invasive plants is influenced by many interacting factors, but evaluating multiple possible mechanisms of invasion success and elucidating the relative importance of abiotic and biotic drivers is challenging, and therefore rarely achieved. We used live, sterile or inoculated soil from different soil origins (native range and introduced range plantation; and invaded plots spanning three different countries) in a fully factorial design to simultaneously examine the influence of soil origin and soil abiotic and biotic factors on the growth of invasive Pinus contorta. Our results displayed significant context dependency in that certain soil abiotic conditions in the introduced ranges (soil nitrogen, phosphorus or carbon content) influenced responses to inoculation treatments. Our findings do not support the enemy release hypothesis or the enhanced mutualism hypothesis, as biota from native and plantation ranges promoted growth similarly. Instead, our results support the missed mutualism hypothesis, as biota from invasive ranges were the least beneficial for seedling growth. Our study provides a novel perspective on how variation in soil abiotic factors can influence plant-soil feedbacks for an invasive tree across broad biogeographical contexts.

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