| Literature DB >> 26969431 |
Natasha Shelby1, Philip E Hulme2, Wim H van der Putten3, Kevin J McGinn2, Carolin Weser4, Richard P Duncan5.
Abstract
The evolution of increased competitive ability (EICA) hypothesis could explain why some introduced plant species perform better outside their native ranges. The EICA hypothesis proposes that introduced plants escape specialist pathogens or herbivores leading to selection for resources to be reallocated away from defence and towards greater competitive ability. We tested the hypothesis that escape from soil-borne enemies has led to increased competitive ability in three non-agriculturalTrifolium(Fabaceae) species native to Europe that were introduced to New Zealand in the 19th century.Trifoliumperformance is intimately tied to rhizosphere biota. Thus, we grew plants from one introduced (New Zealand) and two native (Spain and the UK) provenances for each of three species in pots inoculated with soil microbiota collected from the rhizosphere beneath conspecifics in the introduced and native ranges. Plants were grown singly and in competition with conspecifics from a different provenance in order to compare competitive ability in the presence of different microbial communities. In contrast to the predictions of the EICA hypothesis, we found no difference in the competitive ability of introduced and native provenances when grown with soil microbiota from either the native or introduced range. Although plants from introduced provenances of two species grew more slowly than native provenances in native-range soils, as predicted by the EICA hypothesis, plants from the introduced provenance were no less competitive than native conspecifics. Overall, the growth rate of plants grown singly was a poor predictor of their competitive ability, highlighting the importance of directly quantifying plant performance in competitive scenarios, rather than relying on surrogate measures such as growth rate. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company.Entities:
Keywords: Alien; competition; enemy-release; exotic; invasive; rhizosphere microbiota; soil biota; weed
Year: 2016 PMID: 26969431 PMCID: PMC4833883 DOI: 10.1093/aobpla/plw016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AoB Plants Impact factor: 3.276
Figure 1.Model-adjusted growth rates of plants from the introduced (New Zealand, NZ) and native (Spanish, SP, and the United Kingdom, UK) seed provenances of three Trifolium species grown singly in pots inoculated with rhizosphere soil cultured by conspecifics in New Zealand, Spain and the UK. Error bars are 95 % confidence intervals. Filled circles represent inter-provenance differences that are statistically significant (P < 0.05).
Figure 2.Relative competition intensity indices for plants from the introduced provenance (New Zealand, NZ) and the native-range provenances (Spain, SP, and the United Kingdom, UK) for three Trifolium species grown in pots inoculated with soil from each location. The RCI index is calculated as follows: RCIA(B) = (GRA − GRA(B))/GRA, where GRA is the growth rate of provenance A grown alone and GRA(B) is the growth rate of provenance A grown in competition with provenance B. Higher RCI values (up to a maximum of 1) indicate a stronger competitive effect of provenance B on provenance A; zero indicates no effect of competition. Error bars are 50 % (thick grey bars) and 95 % (thin bars) confidence intervals.
Figure 3.The difference in RCI values between plants from the introduced provenance (New Zealand, NZ) and each native-range provenance (Spain, SP, or the United Kingdom, UK) for three Trifolium species grown in pots inoculated with soil from each location. A value <0 indicates that the introduced provenance was more competitive than the native provenance. Error bars are 50 % (thick grey bars) and 95 % (thin bars) confidence intervals.