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Allison, VJ; Rajaniemi, TK; Goldberg, DE; Zak, DR. 2007. Quantifying direct and indirect effects of fungicide on an old-field plant community: an experimental null-community approach. PLANT ECOLOGY. 190(1):53-69.
Address:
Allison, VJ, Landcare Res, POB 40, Lincoln 7640, New Zealand
Environmental perturbations can alter the composition of plant
communities, either directly, by altering growth of some species more
than others, or indirectly, by altering the strength of interspecific
interactions among species. The relative importance of direct and
indirect effects is not at all well known. We used an experimental
approach to quantifying direct and indirect effects of fungicide on the
composition of a plant community. To separate the direct and indirect
impacts of fungicide we grew plant species in monoculture and mixed
communities, and with and without the systemic fungicide benomyl. We
predicted that direct effects of fungicide would be important at low
but not high nutrient availability, while indirect effects would be
more important at high nutrient availability. After 3 years there was
little impact of fungicide on arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal
colonization, and on soil microbial community composition assessed as
the relative abundance of different phospholipid fatty acids. Like
fertilizer, fungicide increased plant biomass. However, in contrast to
fertilizer, this did not result in a decline in species evenness.
Although not significant, the direct effects of fungicide tended to
oppose the indirect effects of both fungicide and interspecific
interactions on plant community composition. Experiments relying on
fungicide treatments must be interpreted extremely cautiously, because
the impact of fungicide is potentially the integrated response of
plants to multiple factors, including arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi,
pathogenic and saprophytic fungi, and nutrient inputs.
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