Legume effects in a native community invaded by alien Asteraceae in a multi-species comparison

被引:1
|
作者
Ferenc, Viktoria [1 ,2 ]
Brendel, Marco R. [1 ,3 ]
Sheppard, Christine S. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hohenheim, Inst Landscape & Plant Ecol, D-70599 Stuttgart, Germany
[2] State Museum Nat Hist Stuttgart, Dept Bot, D-70191 Stuttgart, Germany
[3] German Fed Agcy Nat Conservat, Div Conservat Agr, D-53179 Bonn, Germany
关键词
Facilitation; Legumes; Aliens; Functional traits; Common garden pot experiment; N-15; NATURAL-ABUNDANCE; NITROGEN-USE EFFICIENCY; MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI; GRASSLAND COMMUNITIES; POSITIVE INTERACTIONS; FUNCTIONAL TRAITS; SPECIES RICHNESS; PLANT DIVERSITY; INVASIVE PLANTS; SOIL;
D O I
10.1007/s00442-023-05400-2
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Facilitation has been a long-neglected type of interaction but received more attention recently. Legumes are commonly involved in facilitative interactions due to their nitrogen fixation. Facilitative interactions are so far underappreciated yet potentially important for biological invasions, especially given increasing numbers of alien species. In a common garden experiment using 30 annual Asteraceae species (neophytes, archaeophytes, plus some natives), grown in communities with or without legume presence, we measured functional traits and fitness in focal Asteraceae, as well as nitrogen characteristics of Asteraceae and two native community phytometer species. We investigated how legume presence affects relationships between trait and nitrogen concentration and Asteraceae fitness; and whether mechanisms of facilitation in legume presence and its effects on aboveground performance differ among native phytometer, neophyte, and archaeophyte Asteraceae using the delta N-15 natural abundance method. Lower specific leaf area was associated with higher aboveground biomass and seed production, with a stronger effect in legume absence. Nitrogen concentration had a positive relationship with biomass, but did not generally increase seed production. Our results hint at N facilitation for the native grass phytometer Festuca rupicola when growing in legume presence, whereas the forb Potentilla argentea and 27 alien Asteraceae species did not indicate facilitative effects. Intriguingly, direct legume facilitation in native phytometer species was only detected when growing with archaeophytes neighbors, not with neophytes. This hints at varied mechanisms of competition for nitrogen between natives and alien species of different residence time and deepens the understanding of altered facilitative leguminous effects in alien species presence.
引用
收藏
页码:413 / 430
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] The educational community and its knowledge and perceptions of native and invasive alien species
    Alejandro J. Sosa
    Nadia L. Jiménez
    Ana C. Faltlhauser
    Tomás Righetti
    Fernando Mc Kay
    Octavio A. Bruzzone
    Iris Stiers
    Adriana Fernández Souto
    Scientific Reports, 11
  • [22] COMPARISON OF INVADED AND NON-INVADED SITES: A CASE STUDY OF ROUGH COCKLEBUR (XANTHIUMSTRUMARIUM L.) AN ALIEN INVASIVE SPECIES
    Ullah, R.
    Khan, N.
    Rahman, A.
    APPLIED ECOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2021, 19 (02): : 1533 - 1548
  • [23] The educational community and its knowledge and perceptions of native and invasive alien species
    Sosa, Alejandro J.
    Jimenez, Nadia L.
    Faltlhauser, Ana C.
    Righetti, Tomas
    Mc Kay, Fernando
    Bruzzone, Octavio A.
    Stiers, Iris
    Souto, Adriana Fernandez
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2021, 11 (01)
  • [24] Phylogeography of vertebrates on the Sunda Shelf: a multi-species comparison
    Leonard, Jennifer A.
    den Tex, Robert-Jan
    Hawkins, Melissa T. R.
    Munoz-Fuentes, Violeta
    Thorington, Richard
    Maldonado, Jesus E.
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2015, 42 (05) : 871 - 879
  • [25] Effects of a nonnative species of Poaceae on aquatic macrophyte community composition: A comparison with a native species
    De Amorim, Sara Regina
    Umetsu, Cristiane Akemi
    Toledo, Douglas
    Monteiro Camargo, Antonio Fernando
    JOURNAL OF AQUATIC PLANT MANAGEMENT, 2015, 53 : 191 - 196
  • [26] Traditional gathering of native hula plants in alien-invaded Hawaiian forests:: adaptive practices, impacts on alien invasive species and conservation implications
    Ticktin, Tamara
    Whitehead, A. Namaka
    Fraiola, Ho'Ala
    ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION, 2006, 33 (03) : 185 - 194
  • [27] Related alien species in their native and invaded ranges: A comparative study of the genus Oenothera in Arkansas (USA) and in the Czech Republic
    Mihulka, S
    PLANT INVASIONS: SPECIES ECOLOGY AND ECOSYSTEM MANAGEMENT, 2001, : 133 - 143
  • [28] Multi-species relationships in legume roots: From pairwise legume-symbiont interactions to the plant - microbiome - soil continuum
    Tsiknia, Myrto
    Tsikou, Daniela
    Papadopoulou, Kalliope K.
    Ehaliotis, Constantinos
    FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY, 2021, 97 (02)
  • [29] Multi-species occupancy models as robust estimators of community richness
    Tingley, Morgan W.
    Nadeau, Christopher P.
    Sandor, Manette E.
    METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2020, 11 (05): : 633 - 642
  • [30] Age-prevalence curves in a multi-species parasite community
    Preston, Daniel L.
    Falke, Landon P.
    Novak, Mark
    FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 2025, 39 (01) : 91 - 102