Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Plant Evolutionary Ecology and Conservation, Taizhou University, Taizhou, 318000, China.
Department of Applied Biology, Technical University of Kenya, P.O. Box, 52428, Nairobi, Kenya.
Am J Bot. 2022 Aug;109(8):1230-1241. doi: 10.1002/ajb2.16034. Epub 2022 Aug 5.
The enemy release hypothesis predicts that release from natural enemies, including soil-borne pathogens, liberates invasive plants from a negative regulating force. Nevertheless, invasive plants may acquire novel enemies and mutualists in the introduced range, which may cause variable effects on invader growth. However, how soil microorganisms may influence competitive ability of invasive plants along invasion chronosequences has been little explored.
Using the invasive plant Solidago canadensis, we tested whether longer residence times are associated with stronger negative plant-soil feedbacks and thus weaker competitive abilities at the individual level. We grew S. canadensis individuals from 36 populations with different residence times across southeastern China in competition versus no competition and in three different types of soils: (1) conspecific rhizospheric soils; (2) soils from uninvaded patches; and (3) sterilized soil. For our competitor treatments, we constructed synthetic communities of four native species (Bidens parviflora, Solanum nigrum, Kalimeris indica, and Mosla scabra), which naturally co-occur with Solidago canadensis in the field.
Solidago canadensis populations with longer residence times experienced stronger positive plant-soil feedbacks and had greater competitive responses (i.e., produced greater above-ground biomass and grew taller) in conspecific rhizospheric soils than in sterilized or uninvaded soils. Moreover, S. canadensis from older populations significantly suppressed above-ground biomass of the native communities in rhizospheric and uninvaded soils but not in sterilized soil.
The present results suggest that older populations of S. canadensis experience stronger positive plant-soil feedbacks, which may enhance their competitive ability against native plant communities.
天敌释放假说预测,包括土壤传播病原体在内的天敌的释放会使入侵植物摆脱负向调节力量。然而,入侵植物在引入的范围内可能会获得新的天敌和共生体,这可能会对入侵植物的生长产生不同的影响。然而,土壤微生物如何影响入侵植物在入侵时间序列上的竞争能力还鲜有研究。
我们使用入侵植物加拿大一枝黄花(Solidago canadensis)来检验个体在较长的定居时间内是否与更强的负向植物-土壤反馈相关,从而在个体水平上具有较弱的竞争能力。我们在中国东南部的 36 个具有不同定居时间的种群中种植了加拿大一枝黄花个体,这些个体在竞争和无竞争的情况下分别种植在三种不同的土壤中:(1)同种根际土壤;(2)未入侵斑块的土壤;(3)灭菌土壤。对于我们的竞争处理,我们构建了四个本地物种(三叶鬼针草、龙葵、野菊和荆芥)的人工群落,这些物种在野外与加拿大一枝黄花自然共存。
在同种根际土壤中,定居时间较长的加拿大一枝黄花种群经历了更强的正向植物-土壤反馈,并且比灭菌或未入侵土壤具有更大的竞争响应(即产生更大的地上生物量和更高的株高)。此外,来自较老种群的加拿大一枝黄花显著抑制了根际和未入侵土壤中本地群落的地上生物量,但在灭菌土壤中则没有。
本研究结果表明,加拿大一枝黄花较老的种群经历了更强的正向植物-土壤反馈,这可能增强了它们对本地植物群落的竞争能力。