Journal Article10.2307/1941601
Feeback between Plants and Their Soil Communities in an Old Field Community
TL;DR: Similar although less pronounced patterns were observed in experiments using inocula consisting of washed live root segments as compared to experiments using whole soil as inoculum, suggesting that root pathogens are one important agent.
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Abstract: The nature of the interaction between plants ant their soil community was investigated by testing for differential responses of four old—field perennial plant species to inocula derived from soil communities that had been grown with ("cultured by") one of these four plant species. The differentiation of the soil communities was evident in measurements of plant survival, phenology, growth, and root—shoot ratios. Effects on survival and growth suggest negative feedbacks between these species and the soil communities that they culture. Survival rates of Krigia dandelion were significantly reduced when grown with their own" soil community. Considered as a whole, the three other species (all grasses) had significantly lower growth and root—shoot ratios when grown with soil communities started with their own inocula compared to soil communities started with the inocula of other species. However, the significance of this effect on growth rate and root—shoot ratios was due primarily to the pairwise comparison of Anthoxanthum odoratum and Danthonia spicata and of Anthoxanthum and Panicum sphaerocarpon, respectively. Pairwise comparisons of Danthonia and Panicum do not suggest differential responses to each other's soils in growth rate or root—shoot ratios nor do soil communities appear to affect the relative competitive ability of these two species. While the components of the soil community responsible for these effects have not been identified, similar although less pronounced patterns were observed in experiments using inocula consisting of washed live root segments as compared to experiments using whole soil as inoculum, suggesting that root pathogens are one important agent.
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Citations
What have exotic plant invasions taught us over the past 20 years
Ragan M. Callaway,John L. Maron +1 more
TL;DR: Perceptions of how the study of exotic plant species has contributed to the changing face of ecology over the past 20 years are discussed.
REVIEW: PART OF A SPECIAL ISSUE ON ROOT BIOLOGY Interactions between exotic invasive plants and soil microbes in the rhizosphere suggest that 'everything is not everywhere'
Marnie E. Rout,Ragan M. Callaway,Fort Keogh +2 more
- 01 Jan 2012
TL;DR: Whether or not 'everything is everywhere' is expanded by using the inherently biogeographic context of plant invasions by reviewing the literature on interactions among invasive plants and the microorganisms in the rhizosphere to find that these interactions can be delineated at multiple scales.
Intra- and interspecific plant-soil interactions, soil legacies and priority effects during old-field succession
TL;DR: Three mechanisms how the legacy of plant–soil interactions may enhance the rate of succession through priority effects are suggested: early successional plant species exert negative plant-soil feedback; co-occurring plant species cause negative interspecific plant– soil effects to the early succession species; and the earlysuccessional species have overall positive interspecific Plant–soils effects on the co- Occurring plant Species.
Evaluating plant–soil feedback together with competition in a serpentine grassland
TL;DR: It is suggested that feedback and competition should not be viewed as entirely separate processes and that their importance in structuring plant communities cannot be judged in isolation from each other.
Pathogen impacts on plant diversity in variable environments
TL;DR: It is suggested that pathogens may mediate plant responses to environmental variability and change, and in doing so may maintain diversity.
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