J Plant Ecol ›› Advance articles     DOI:10.1093/jpe/rtaf021

   

Plant-soil feedback in European grasslands is phylogenetically independent but affected by plant species origin

Julia Dieskau1,2, Isabell Hensen1,2, Nico Eisenhauer2,3, Susanne Lachmuth1,4, Harald Auge2,4   

  1. 1 Institute of Biology/Geobotany and Botanical Garden, Martin Luther University HalleWittenberg, Große Steinstraße 79/80, 06108 Halle (Saale), Germany
    2 German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig, Puschstrasse 4, 04103 Leipzig, Germany
    3 Institute of Biology, Leipzig University, Puschstraße 4, 04103 Leipzig, Germany
    4 Leibniz Center for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF), Eberswalder Str. 84, 15374 Müncheberg, Germany
    5 Department of Community Ecology, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Theodor-Lieser-Straße 4, 06120 Halle, Germany

    *Correspondence author: E-mail: julia.dieskau@botanik.uni-halle.de
    *Correspondence: Julia Dieskau
    Email: julia.dieskau@botanik.uni-halle.de
    Phone: (+49) 345 55 26193
  • Online:2025-03-10 Published:2025-03-10
  • Supported by:
    This work was supported by iDiv, funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG-FZT 118, 202548816). Open Access funding was made possible and organized by Projekt DEAL.

Abstract: Interspecific plant-soil feedback (PSF)—the influence of soil conditioned by one plant species on another—are key to ecosystem processes but remain challenging to predict due to complex factors like species origin and phylogenetic relatedness. These aspects are underexplored, limiting our understanding of the mechanisms driving PSFs and their broader implications for ecosystem functioning and species coexistence. To shed light on the role of plant species origin and phylogenetic distance in interspecific PSFs, we conducted a greenhouse experiment with 10 native responding species and soils conditioned by 10 native and 10 exotic species resulting in 20 species pairs. These pairs represented a range of phylogenetic distances between both species, spanning up to 270 million years of evolutionary history since their last common ancestor. Conditioning by both native and exotic species reduced biomass production, with stronger inhibition observed for native-conditioned soils. Native-conditioned soils also exhibited lower phosphorus levels, higher basal and specific respiration, and greater cation exchange capacity, base saturation, and magnesium content compared to exotic-conditioned soils. Contrary to expectations, phylogenetic distance did not influence PSFs, regardless of conditioning species origin. Our findings suggest that co-evolution drives native plants to foster microbial communities with low carbon-use efficiency, highlighting soil biota’s critical role in PSFs. This advances our understanding of interactions between plant species origin and microbial communities and underlines the importance of microbial management for promoting native species and controlling invasives. The lack of phylogenetic distance effects aligns with prior studies, indicating evolutionary relatedness alone does not reliably predict PSF outcomes.

Key words: co-evolution, enemy release hypothesis, greenhouse experiment, microbial respiration, native vs. exotic, plant-soil interactions, soil microorganisms