4.3 Article

Soil conditioning and plant-soil feedbacks affect competitive relationships between native and invasive grasses

期刊

PLANT ECOLOGY
卷 213, 期 8, 页码 1337-1344

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11258-012-0092-7

关键词

Plant-soil feedback; Competition; Bromus tectorum; Agropyron cristatum; Invasion; Legacy; Niche construction

资金

  1. Nevada Agricultural Experiment Station

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Understanding how competition from invasive species and soil conditions individually and interactively affect native performance will increase knowledge of invasion dynamics and can be used to improve the success of restoration plans. This study, conducted in Reno NV, USA, uses a two-phase plant-soil feedback experiment coupled with a target-neighbor competition design to examine the individual and interactive effects of both soil conditions and invasive neighbors on native performance. Study species include invasive species (Bromus tectorum and Agropyron cristatum) and native species (Elymus elymoides and Pseudoroegneria spicata). Results indicate that both plant performance and competitive interactions were influenced by species-specific soil conditioning. Specifically, invasive B. tectorum generated a larger competitive effect on natives than invasive A. cristatum; however, only A. cristatum conditioned soil in a manner that increased competitive effects of conspecifics on natives. Native P. spicata was relatively unaffected by soil conditioning and conversely, E. elymoides was strongly affected by soil conditioning. Few previous studies have examined soil conditioning and the interaction of soil conditioning and neighbor effects that both are potentially important mechanisms in structuring plant communities and influencing plant invasion.

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