College of Life and Environmental Science, Central South University of Forestry and Technology, Changsha 410004, Hunan, China.
College of Life and Environmental Science, Central South University of Forestry and Technology, Changsha 410004, Hunan, China; National Engineering Laboratory of Applied Technology for Forestry & Ecology in Southern China, Central South University of Forestry and Technology, Changsha 410004, Hunan, China.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Aug 10;937:173532. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.173532. Epub 2024 May 25.
In response to varying environments along urban and rural gradients, invasive plants may strategically allocate resources to enhance their invasiveness. However, how invasive plants balance their resources for growth, reproduction, and defense as responses to biotic and abiotic factors across these gradients remain unclear. We conducted field surveys on the growth, reproduction, and herbivory of the invasive species Phytolacca americana across diverse urban and rural habitats. Leaf samples were collected to analyze the nutritional content, primary and secondary metabolites. We found that plant growth rates, specific leaf area, leaf nitrogen content, and concentrations of flavonoids and saponins were higher in urban habitats, while reproduction, herbivory, and carbon-to‑nitrogen ratios were lower than those in rural habitats. We also found a trade-off between growth rate and herbivory, as well as trade-offs among defense traits associated with herbivory (e.g., leaf mass per area, the inverse of leaf nitrogen content, and carbon‑nitrogen ratio) and the production of metabolites associated with abiotic stress tolerance (e.g., soluble sugars, flavonoids, and saponins). As earlier studies showed low levels of genetic diversity within and between populations, our findings suggest that the urban-rural gradient patterns of resource allocation are primarily phenotypic plasticity in response to herbivory in rural areas and abiotic factors in urban areas. Our study sheds light on the mechanisms by which urbanization affects plant invasions and offers insights for the implementation of their management strategies.
为了应对城市和农村梯度环境的变化,入侵植物可能会战略性地分配资源以增强其入侵性。然而,入侵植物如何在这些梯度上平衡资源以应对生物和非生物因素的生长、繁殖和防御,目前仍不清楚。我们对入侵物种美洲商陆在不同城市和农村生境中的生长、繁殖和取食进行了实地调查。采集叶片样本进行营养成分、初生代谢物和次生代谢物分析。我们发现,城市生境中植物的生长速度、比叶面积、叶片氮含量、类黄酮和皂苷浓度较高,而繁殖、取食和碳氮比则低于农村生境。我们还发现生长速度和取食之间存在权衡,以及与取食相关的防御特征(例如叶面积比、叶片氮含量的倒数和碳氮比)与适应非生物胁迫的代谢产物(例如可溶性糖、类黄酮和皂苷)之间存在权衡。由于早期的研究表明种群内和种群间的遗传多样性水平较低,我们的研究结果表明,资源分配的城乡梯度模式主要是对农村地区取食和城市地区非生物因素的表型可塑性。本研究揭示了城市化如何影响植物入侵的机制,并为实施其管理策略提供了见解。