| Literature DB >> 23647722 |
Monica Gagliano1, Michael Renton.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Both competitive and facilitative interactions between species play a fundamental role in shaping natural communities. A recent study showed that competitive interactions between plants can be mediated by some alternative signalling channel, extending beyond those channels studied so far (i.e. chemicals, contact and light). Here, we tested whether such alternative pathway also enables facilitative interactions between neighbouring plant species. Specifically, we examined whether the presence of a 'good' neighbouring plant like basil positively influenced the germination of chilli seeds when all known signals were blocked. For this purpose, we used a custom-designed experimental set-up that prevented above- and below-ground contact and blocked chemical and light-mediated signals normally exchange by plants.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23647722 PMCID: PMC3651341 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6785-13-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ecol ISSN: 1472-6785 Impact factor: 2.964
Figure 1Diagram illustrating the custom-designed experimental unit (not in scale). (A) Chilli seeds were arranged in a circle around the adult plant sealed the central cylindrical box. (B) All seeds and adult plants within each unit were housed within 2 different sized square boxes, one inside the other, with the air in between the two boxes removed using a vacuum pump. This schematic representation has been adapted from [17].
Figure 2Effects of the presence of a neighbouring (A) basil and (B) chilli plant on the percentage of chilli seeds germinating over time. The median, inter-quartile range and 5-95 percentiles are represented by the middle bar, the top and bottom of box and the whiskers respectively. The mean is also represented by the small ‘+’ symbol.