| Literature DB >> 27252726 |
Karim Dawkins1, Nwadiuto Esiobu1.
Abstract
Invasive plant species constitute a major ecological and economic problem worldwide, often distorting trophic levels and ecosystem balance. Numerous studies implicate factors ranging from environmental plasticity, competition for nutrient and space, and allelopathy in the success of invasive species in general. The Brazilian Pepper tree (BP) was introduced to the United States in the 1800s and has since become a category one invasive plant in Florida. It has aggressively spread to about 3000 km(2) of terrestrial surface, fueled in part by the prevalence of the hybrid genotypes and environmental perturbations. It displays some of the well-established invasive mechanisms but there is a serious dearth of knowledge on the plant-microbe-soil interactions and whether the rhizobiome plays any roles in the displacement of native flora and the range expansion of BP. Several control measures, including chemical, mechanical, and biological antagonism have been used with limited success while restoration of natives in soils from which BP was removed has proved problematic partly due to a poorly understood phenomenon described as the "BP legacy effect." Emerging evidence suggests that allelopathy, selective recruitment of beneficial soil microbes, disruption of microbial community structure and alteration of nutrient cycling, exhibited by many other invasive plant species may also be involved in the case of BP. This brief review discusses the well-established BP invasion mechanisms and highlights the current understanding of the molecular, below-ground processes. It also points out the gaps in studies on the potential role of microbial interactions in the success of BP invasion. These hitherto poorly studied mechanisms could further explain the aggressive spread of BP and could potentially contribute significantly to effective control measures and enable appropriate strategies for restoring native plants. The review advocates for the use of cutting-edge techniques in advancing the plant microbiome science. Ultimately, comparing metagenomic analyses of the rhizobiome of invasive plants grown in native and non-native soils could lead to a better understanding of the microbial determinants of biotic resistance, potentially empowering environmental managers with some predictive power of future trends of plant invasion.Entities:
Keywords: allelopathy; biotic resistance; enemy release; mechanisms of invasion; mycorrhizae; plant invasion; rhizobiome; soil microbial community
Year: 2016 PMID: 27252726 PMCID: PMC4878544 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2016.00712
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Selected allelochemical and microbe mediated mechanisms of plant invasion exhibited by well-studied invasive plant species compared to the Brazilian Pepper tree status quo.
| Alellochemicals/Soil microbe(s) | Invasive plant involved | Method of action | Brazilian Pepper tree Status quo | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Juglone | Black walnut ( | Juglone – selectively inhibits respiration of nearby plants | No known direct allelochemical discovered. Plant extracts inhibit seed germination in native plants∗∗ | |
| Sodium ions | Salt lover ( | Alteration of soil microbial and plant communities via increased sodium toxicity | No known or similar mechanism discovered. High phosphate concentrations are associated with BP invaded soils∗∗ | |
| 8-hydroxy-quinolone | Diffuse knapweed ( | Alteration of soil microbial composition via 8-hydroxy–quinolone antibacterial effects | Numerous anti-microbial compounds recovered from BP∗∗. Links to plant invasion are vague. | |
| Glucosinates | Garlic mustard ( | Alteration of composition of arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM) in soil | No glucosinates recovered from BP yet and no reports on similar mode of action despite clear AM involvement | |
| Firetree ( | Colonize nitrogen-limited soils, altering plant community structure | Similar studies are scarce for BP. Recruitment of such soil microbial species unknown | ||
| Mycorrhizal fungi | Pine ( | Superior resource use mechanism. Improves growth and colonization | Known to recruit Mycorrhizal fungi∗∗. Exhibits efficient resource use mechanisms and nutrient uptake | |
| Sulfur oxidizing and sulfur reducing bacteria, arbuscular mycorrhizae | Yellow starthistle ( | Competitive advantage with altered rhizosphere microbiota composition | No such studies have tied sulfur oxidizing or reducing bacteria in BP invasion | |
| Sulfur oxidizing and sulfur reducing bacteria, arbuscular mycorrhiza | Barb goatgrass ( | Competitive advantage with microbial association and altered rhizosphere microbiota composition | No such studies have tied sulfur oxidizing or reducing bacteria in BP invasion | |
| Forb ( | Disruption of soil mycorrhizal community to the detriment of natives. | BP has been shown to recruit | ||
| Indirect Allelopathy via reduction of n-fixing rhizobacteria and | No such studies have tied the reduction of beneficial rhizobacteria and |