| Literature DB >> 32185377 |
Robert M Cirocco1, José M Facelli1, Jennifer R Watling2.
Abstract
Many studies have investigated the effect of parasitic plants on their hosts; however, few have examined how parasite impact is affected by host size. In a glasshouse experiment, we investigated the impact of the Australian native hemiparasitic vine, Cassytha pubescens, on a major invasive shrub, Ulex europaeus, of different sizes. Infected plants had significantly lower total, shoot, and root biomass, but the parasite's impact was more severe on small than on large hosts. When infected, small but not large hosts had significantly lower nodule biomass. Irrespective of size, infection significantly decreased the host shoot/root ratio, pre-dawn and midday quantum yields, maximum electron transport rates, and carbon isotope composition, and the host nodule biomass per gram of root biomass significantly increased in response to infection. Infection did not affect host foliar nitrogen concentration or midday shoot water potential. Parasite biomass was significantly lower on small relative to large hosts, but was similar when expressed on a per gram of host total biomass basis. Parasite stem nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium concentrations were significantly greater when C. pubescens was growing on small than on large hosts. Our results clearly show that C. pubescens strongly decreases performance of this major invasive shrub, especially when hosts are small. This suggests that C. pubescens could be used most effectively as a native biocontrol when deployed on smaller hosts.Entities:
Keywords: Alien species; biocontrol; biomass; carbon isotope; chronic photoinhibition; holoparasite; nitrogen; parasitic plants; plant invasions; weed
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32185377 PMCID: PMC7307848 DOI: 10.1093/jxb/eraa140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Bot ISSN: 0022-0957 Impact factor: 6.992
P-values for independent effects of infection with C. pubescens (I), size of U. europaeus, and their interaction (I×S) on total, shoot, and root biomass, shoot/root ratio (S/R), nodule biomass (Nod), Nod g–1 host root biomass, pre-dawn and midday quantum yields (Fv/Fm, Φ PSII), maximum electron transport rates (ETRmax), midday water potential (Ψ), carbon isotope composition (δ 13C), and foliar nitrogen (N) and iron (Fe) concentration of U. europaeus
| Total | Shoot | Root | S/R | Nod | Nod g–1 root |
| ΦPSII | ETRmax | Ψ | δ13C | N | Fe | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 0.779 |
| 0.925 |
|
| S |
|
|
| 0.193 |
| 0.105 | 0.172 |
| 0.113 |
|
| 0.228 |
|
| I×S |
|
|
| 0.559 |
| 0.662 | 0.832 | 0.394 | 0.415 | 0.235 | 0.184 | 0.742 |
|
Significant and marginally significant effects are in bold; df, F, and sum of square values are presented in Supplementary Table S1. Total, shoot, root, and Nod biomass were square root transformed, and ETRmax, Nod g–1 host root biomass, and Fe were log transformed to achieve homoscedasticity.
Fig. 1.Total (A) shoot (B) and root (C) biomass of small and large U. europaeus either uninfected (white bars) or infected (light grey bars) with C. pubescens. Total parasite biomass (D) and parasite biomass per unit total host biomass (E) for C. pubescens when infecting either small or large U. europaeus. Data are means (±1 SE); different letters signify significant differences and n=8.
Shoot/root ratio (S/R), nodule biomass (Nod; g DW), Nod per gram of host root biomass, midday water potential (Ψ; MPa), and carbon isotope values (δ 13C; ‰) of small (S) or large (L) U. europaeus either uninfected (minus) or infected (plus) with C. pubescens
| S/R | Nod | Nod g–1 root | Ψ | δ13C | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment | |||||
| S– | 3.09±0.319 | 0.487±0.057 a | 0.049±0.004 | −1.44±0.082 | −31.6±0.223 |
| S+ | 2.59±0.301 | 0.120±0.018 b | 0.100±0.020 | −1.30±0.094 | −32.8±0.240 |
| L– | 2.89±0.169 | 0.511±0.050 a | 0.039±0.003 | −1.53±0.105 | −31.2±0.285 |
| L+ | 2.07±0.258 | 0.323±0.061 a | 0.058±0.007 | −1.62±0.105 | −31.7±0.141 |
| Infection | |||||
| – | 2.99±0.176 a | N/A | 0.044±0.003 a | −1.48±0.056 | −31.4±0.185 a |
| + | 2.33±0.203 b | N/A | 0.079±0.011 b | −1.43±0.067 | −32.3±0.196 b |
| Size | |||||
| S | 2.84±0.222 | N/A | 0.074±0.012 | −1.37±0.063 a | −32.2±0.220 a |
| L | 2.48±0.183 | N/A | 0.049±0.004 | −1.58±0.073 b | −31.4±0.170 b |
Data are means (± 1 SE). Treatments: n=8, infection or size: n=16, and different lower case letters signify a significant difference. Significant infection×size interaction for nodule biomass, independent infection effect on S/R, Nod g–1, root, and δ 13C, and significant independent size effect on Ψ and δ 13C.
Fig. 2.(A) Pre-dawn (Fv/Fm) and (C) midday quantum yield (Φ PSII), and (F) maximum electron transport rate (ETRmax) of small and large U. europaeus either uninfected (white bar) or infected (light grey bar) with C. pubescens. Independent effect of infection on (B) pre-dawn and (D) midday quantum yield, and (G) maximum electron transport rate of U. europaeus. Independent effect of size on (E) midday quantum yield of host (dotted bars). Data are means (±1 SE); different letters signify significant differences. (A, C, F) n=8 and (B, D, E, G) n=16.
Fig. 3.(A) Pre-dawn (Fv/Fm) and (B) midday quantum yield (Φ PSII), and (C) maximum electron transport rate (ETRmax) of C. pubescens when infecting small or large U. europaeus. Data are means (±1 SE); no significant differences and n=8.
Fig. 4.Spine nitrogen (A) and iron (B) concentration of small or large U. europaeus when uninfected (white bar) or infected (light grey bar) with C. pubescens. (C) Nitrogen, (D) phosphorus, and (E) potassium concentration of stems of C. pubescens when infecting small or large U. europaeus. Data are means (±1 SE); different letters signify significant differences, (A, C) n=8 and (B, D, E) n=4.