Journal of Plant Ecology ›› 2022, Vol. 15 ›› Issue (3): 639-649.DOI: 10.1093/jpe/rtab065

• • 上一篇    下一篇

  

  • 收稿日期:2020-12-22 修回日期:2021-04-17 接受日期:2021-05-18 出版日期:2022-06-01 发布日期:2022-07-01

Current plant diversity but not its soil legacy influences exotic plant invasion

Wei Xue1, Si-Mei Yao1, Lin Huang1, Sergio R. Roiloa2, Bao-Ming Ji3 and Fei-Hai Yu1,*   

  1. 1 Institute of Wetland Ecology & Clone Ecology/Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Evolutionary Ecology and Conservation, Taizhou University, Taizhou 318000, China, 2 BioCost Group, Biology Department, Universidade da Coruña, A Coruña 15071, Spain, 3 School of Grassland Science, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, China

    *Correspondence author. E-mail: feihaiyu@126.com
  • Received:2020-12-22 Revised:2021-04-17 Accepted:2021-05-18 Online:2022-06-01 Published:2022-07-01

摘要: 植物多样性而非其土壤遗留效应影响外来植物入侵
植物多样性可以影响外来植物入侵,然而植物多样性的土壤遗留效应是否能够影响外来植物入侵目前仍不清楚。植物多样性能够改变土壤微生物群落和土壤理化性质,这种遗留效应可能会对该土壤中外来植物的生长产生影响。因此,我们假设植物多样性的土壤遗留效应会影响外来植物的入侵。为了检验该假说,我们开展了一个两阶段的植物-土壤反馈实验。在土壤驯化阶段,我们将12个植物物种(4种禾草植物、3种豆科植物和5种杂类草植物)分别单独种植,或者随机选择8个物种(包含3个功能型)混合种植在土壤中。在反馈阶段,我们将入侵植物三叶鬼针草(Bidens pilosa)分别与本地禾草荩草(Arthraxon hispidus)、本地杂类草翅果菊(Pterocypsela indica)或者同时与荩草和翅果菊种植在被驯化过的土壤中。研 究结果显示,三叶鬼针草相对于其本地竞争植物的生长取决于驯化植物和竞争植物物种的功能型。驯化植物的多样性对三叶鬼针草与其本地竞争植物之间的生长差异没有显著影响。然而,随着本地竞争植物物种多样性的增加,三叶鬼针草相对于其本地竞争植物的生长显著降低。这些结果表明,当前的植物多样性可以通过增加入侵植物和本地植物之间的生长不平衡性来减少外来植物的入侵。但是,植物多样性的土壤遗留效应对外来植物入侵的影响可能很小。

关键词: 三叶鬼针草(Bidens pilosa), 竞争平衡, 多样性效应, 入侵植物, 植物-土壤反馈

Abstract:

Current plant diversity can influence exotic plant invasion, but it is unclear whether there is a legacy effect of plant diversity on exotic plant invasion. As plant diversity can affect soil microbial communities and physio-chemical properties, which may cascade to impact subsequent exotic plant growth, we hypothesize that the soil legacy effect of plant diversity can influence exotic plant invasion. We conducted a plant–soil feedback experiment. In the conditioning phase, we trained soils by monocultures of 12 plant species from three functional groups (4 grasses, 3 legumes and 5 forbs) and mixtures of 8 randomly selected species with all three functional groups from this 12-species pool. In the test phase, we grew the invasive plant Bidens pilosa with a co-occurring native grass (Arthraxon hispidus), with a co-occurring native forb (Pterocypsela indica) or with both in each type of the conditioned soils. The performance of B. pilosa relative to its native competitors varied depending on the functional type of both conditioning plant species in the conditioning phase and competing plant species in the test phase. Diversity of the conditioning plants did not influence the growth difference between B. pilosa and its native competitors. However, increasing diversity of the competing plant species reduced the performance of B. pilosa relative to its native competitors. Our results suggest that current plant diversity can reduce exotic plant invasion through increasing growth inequality between invasive and native plants, but the soil legacy effect of plant diversity may have little impact on exotic plant invasion.

Key words: Bidens pilosa, competitive balance, diversity effect, invasive plant, plant–soil feedback