Allelopathic effect of a native species on a major plant invader in Europe

被引:0
|
作者
Mathias Christina
Soraya Rouifed
Sara Puijalon
Félix Vallier
Guillaume Meiffren
Floriant Bellvert
Florence Piola
机构
[1] CIRAD,
[2] UMR Eco&Sols,undefined
[3] Universite Lyon 1,undefined
[4] Villeurbanne,undefined
[5] CNRS,undefined
[6] ENTPE,undefined
[7] UMR5023,undefined
[8] LEHNA,undefined
[9] Universite Lyon 1,undefined
[10] Villeurbanne,undefined
[11] CNRS,undefined
[12] UMR5557,undefined
[13] Ecologie Microbienne,undefined
来源
The Science of Nature | 2015年 / 102卷
关键词
Invasion; Allelopathy; Biotic resistance; x ;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Biological invasions have become a major global issue in ecosystem conservation. As formalized in the “novel weapon hypothesis”, the allelopathic abilities of species are actively involved in invasion success. Here, we assume that allelopathy can also increase the biotic resistance of native species against invasion. We tested this hypothesis by studying the impact of the native species Sambucus ebulus on the colonization of propagules of the invasive species Fallopia x bohemica and the subsequent development of plants from these. Achenes and rhizome fragments from two natural populations were grown in a greenhouse experiment for 50 days. We used an experimental design that involved “donor” and “target” pots in order to separate resource competition from allelopathy. An allelopathic treatment effect was observed for plant growth but not for propagule establishment. Treatment affected, in particular, the growth of Fallopia plants originating from achenes, but there was less influence on plants originating from rhizomes. By day 50, shoot height had decreased by 27 % for plants originating from rhizomes and by 38 % for plants originating from achenes. The number of leaves for plants originating from achenes had only decreased by 20 %. Leaf and above- and below-ground dry masses decreased with treatment by 40, 41 and 25 % for plants originating from rhizomes and 70, 61 and 55 % for plants originating from achenes, respectively. S. ebulus extracts were analysed using high-performance chromatography, and the choice of test molecules was narrowed down. Our results suggest native species use allelopathy as a biotic containment mechanism against the naturalization of invasive species.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Plant functional traits of a shrub invader relative to sympatric native shrubs
    Zinnert, Julie C.
    Shiflett, Sheri A.
    Vick, Jaclyn K.
    Young, Donald R.
    ECOSPHERE, 2013, 4 (10):
  • [42] Allelopathic Exudates of Cogongrass (Imperata cylindrica): Implications for the Performance of Native Pine Savanna Plant Species in the Southeastern US
    Hagan, Donald L.
    Jose, Shibu
    Lin, Chung-Ho
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY, 2013, 39 (02) : 312 - 322
  • [43] Allelopathic Exudates of Cogongrass (Imperata cylindrica): Implications for the Performance of Native Pine Savanna Plant Species in the Southeastern US
    Donald L. Hagan
    Shibu Jose
    Chung-Ho Lin
    Journal of Chemical Ecology, 2013, 39 : 312 - 322
  • [44] Nitrogen deposition influences the allelopathic effect of an invasive plant on the reproduction of a native plant: Solidago canadensis versus Pterocypsela laciniata
    Wang, Congyan
    Liu, Jun
    Xiao, Hongguang
    Zhou, Jiawei
    Du, Daolin
    POLISH JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2017, 65 (01) : 87 - 96
  • [45] Direct effects of a non-native invader erode native plant fitness in the forest understory
    Bialic-Murphy, Lalasia
    Brouwer, Nathan L.
    Kalisz, Susan
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2020, 108 (01) : 189 - 198
  • [46] Impact of an invader on species diversity is stronger in the non-native range than in the native range
    Ledger, Kimberly J.
    Pal, Robert W.
    Murphy, Patrick
    Nagy, David U.
    Filep, Rita
    Callaway, Ragan M.
    PLANT ECOLOGY, 2015, 216 (09) : 1285 - 1295
  • [47] An allelopathic plant facilitates species richness in the Mediterranean garrigue
    Ehlers, Bodil K.
    Charpentier, Anne
    Grondahl, Eva
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2014, 102 (01) : 176 - 185
  • [48] Variations in allelopathic potential among plant species in coastal plant community
    Ye, X. Q.
    Meng, J. L.
    Wu, M.
    Shao, X. X.
    Li, C. M.
    ALLELOPATHY JOURNAL, 2016, 37 (02): : 221 - 230
  • [49] Impact of an invader on species diversity is stronger in the non-native range than in the native range
    Kimberly J. Ledger
    Robert W. Pal
    Patrick Murphy
    David U. Nagy
    Rita Filep
    Ragan M. Callaway
    Plant Ecology, 2015, 216 : 1285 - 1295
  • [50] Invader presence disrupts the stabilizing effect of species richness in plant community recovery after drought
    Vetter, Vanessa M. S.
    Kreyling, Juergen
    Dengler, Juergen
    Apostolova, Iva
    Arfin-Khan, Mohammed A. S.
    Berauer, Bernd J.
    Berwaers, Sigi
    De Boeck, Hans J.
    Nijs, Ivan
    Schuchardt, Max A.
    Sopotlieva, Desislava
    von Gillhausen, Philipp
    Wilfahrt, Peter A.
    Zimmermann, Maja
    Jentsch, Anke
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2020, 26 (06) : 3539 - 3551