TL;DR: In this article, the effects of soil biota from Ligustrum monospecific forest stands and native montane forests on growth, biomass allocation, and nutrition of alien LIGUSTrum and native Lithraea were investigated.
Abstract: Alien invasive trees may expand and form monospecific forests by enhancing mutualism with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) and/or preventing the establishment of other plants through accumulation of antagonists for native plants. The success of invasive plants also has been associated with their higher phenotypic plasticity. Here we tested these mechanisms by studying the global invasive tree Ligustrum lucidum (hereafter Ligustrum) and the dominant native tree of the Chaquean montane forest (central Argentina) Lithraea molleoides (hereafter Lithraea). We experimentally addressed the effects of soil biota from Ligustrum monospecific forest stands and native montane forests on growth, biomass allocation, and nutrition of alien Ligustrum and native Lithraea. Soil biota was recovered from the rooting zone of adult trees of both species in each forest type. We found that arbuscule colonization in Ligustrum roots was significantly higher in seedlings grown with AMF communities from monospecific invaded forests in comparison to native soils. Mycorrhizal colonization in Lithraea roots did not differed between forest types. Soil biota from the rooting zone of the native Lithraea had no major effects on both itself and the invasive Ligustrum. Instead, AMF from Ligustrum rooting zone almost tripled and doubled P nutrition of the alien and the native compared with non-AMF treatments, respectively. Besides, antagonistic effects of soil biota were not observed. Lithraea root mass fraction (root mass/total plant mass, RMF) was not affected by forest type nor by soil treatment but Ligustrum RMF was affected by both factors. In particular, RMF decreased when seedlings grew with AMF from its rooting zone. The observed positive plant–soil feedback and the phenotypic plasticity of Ligustrum could explain, at least in part, the high invasiveness and the formation of monospecific forest stands by this global invader.
TL;DR: The majority of the poisonous South American Anacardiaceae, which comprise the genera Toxicodendron, Lithraea, Mauria, Tapirira and Loxopterigium, are confined to well-defined geographic or climatic areas and the native populations are aware of the dangers involved in handling or even approaching them.
TL;DR: Comparison of the characters of the ovule, fruit and seed of L. brasiliensis with those of various species of Rhus and other genera of the tribe Rhoeae presents evidence that the species could be most closely associated with the genus Rhus.
TL;DR: The first records of fossil plants from the Nirihuau Formation (middle Miocene) were published by Edward Berry at the beginning of the last century as discussed by the authors, where he described a few ferns, gymnosperms and angiosperms, based on these records, stand out two specimens that Berry interpreted as pinnate leaves of Cycadaceae (now Zamiaceae) that he assigned to the new species Zamia australis Berry.