Invasive plants and their escape from root herbivory:: a worldwide comparison of the root-feeding nematode communities of the dune grass Ammophila arenaria in natural and introduced ranges

被引:87
|
作者
van der Putten, WH
Yeates, GW
Duyts, H
Reis, CS
Karssen, G
机构
[1] Netherlands Inst Ecol NIOO KNAW, Dept Multitroph Interact, NL-6666 ZG Heteren, Netherlands
[2] Landcare Res, Palmerston North, New Zealand
[3] Univ Coimbra, IMAR, Dept Bot, P-3000 Coimbra, Portugal
[4] Plant Protect Serv, Nematol Sect, NL-6700 HC Wageningen, Netherlands
关键词
Ammophila arenaria; Ammophila breviligulata; biotic resistance hypothesis; enemy escape hypothesis; feeding specialist; invasive plant; root herbivore; soil pathogen;
D O I
10.1007/s10530-004-1196-3
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Invasive plants generally have fewer aboveground pathogens and viruses in their introduced range than in their natural range, and they also have fewer pathogens than do similar plant species native to the introduced range. However, although plant abundance is strongly controlled by root herbivores and soil pathogens, there is very little knowledge on how invasive plants escape from belowground enemies. We therefore investigated if the general pattern for aboveground pathogens also applies to root-feeding nematodes and used the natural foredune grass Ammophila arenaria as a model. In the late 1800s, the European A. arenaria was introduced into southeast Australia (Tasmania), New Zealand, South Africa, and the west coast of the USA to be used for sand stabilization. In most of these regions, it has become a threat to native vegetation, because its excessive capacity to stabilize windblown sand has changed the geomorphology of coastal dunes. In stable dunes of most introduced regions, A. arenaria is more abundant and persists longer than in stabilized dunes of the natural range. We collected soil and root samples and used additional literature data to quantify the taxon richness of root-feeding nematodes on A. arenaria in its natural range and collected samples from the four major regions where it has been introduced. In most introduced regions A. arenaria did not have fewer root-feeding nematode taxa than the average number in its natural range, and native plant species did not have more nematode taxa than the introduced species. However, in the introduced range native plants had more feeding-specialist nematode taxa than A. arenaria and major feeding specialists (the sedentary endoparasitic cyst and root knot nematodes) were not found on A. arenaria in the southern hemisphere. We conclude that invasiveness of A. arenaria correlates with escape from feeding specialist nematodes, so that the pattern of escape from root-feeding nematodes is more alike escape from aboveground insect herbivores than escape from aboveground pathogens and viruses. In the natural range of A. arenaria, the number of specialist-feeding nematode taxa declines towards the margins. Growth experiments are needed to determine the relationship between nematode taxon diversity, abundance, and invasiveness of A. arenaria.
引用
收藏
页码:733 / 746
页数:14
相关论文
共 6 条
  • [1] Invasive plants and their escape from root herbivory: a worldwide comparison of the root-feeding nematode communities of the dune grass Ammophila arenaria in natural and introduced ranges
    W. H. van der Putten
    G. W. Yeates
    H. Duyts
    C. Schreck. Reis
    G. Karssen
    [J]. Biological Invasions, 2005, 7 : 733 - 746
  • [2] Mechanism of control of root-feeding nematodes by mycorrhizal fungi in the dune grass Ammophila arenaria
    de la Peña, E
    Rodriguez-Echeverría, S
    van der Putten, WH
    Freitas, H
    Moens, M
    [J]. NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2006, 169 (04) : 829 - 840
  • [3] Evidence of population differentiation in the dune grass Ammophila arenaria and its associated root-feeding nematodes
    de la Pena, Eduardo
    Bonte, Dries
    Moens, Maurice
    [J]. PLANT AND SOIL, 2009, 324 (1-2) : 307 - 316
  • [4] Evidence of population differentiation in the dune grass Ammophila arenaria and its associated root-feeding nematodes
    Eduardo de la Peña
    Dries Bonte
    Maurice Moens
    [J]. Plant and Soil, 2009, 324 : 307 - 316
  • [5] Soil feedback effects to the foredune grass Ammophila arenaria by endoparasitic root-feeding nematodes and whole soil communities
    Brinkman, EP
    Troelstra, SR
    van der Putten, WH
    [J]. SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2005, 37 (11): : 2077 - 2087
  • [6] Can root-feeders alter the composition of AMF communities? Experimental evidence from the dune grass Ammophila arenaria
    Rodriguez-Echeverria, Susana
    de la Pena, Eduardo
    Moens, Maurice
    Freitas, Helena
    van der Putten, Win H.
    [J]. BASIC AND APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2009, 10 (02) : 131 - 140