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Cipollini, D; Stevenson, R; Cipollini, K. 2008. Contrasting effects of allelochemicals from two invasive plants on the performance of a nonmycorrhizal plant. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PLANT SCIENCES. 169(3):371-375.
Address:
Cipollini, D, Wright State Univ, Dept Biol Sci, 3640 Colonel Glenn
Highway, Dayton, OH 45435
In addition to resource competition, allelopathy is believed to
contribute to the invasiveness and impact of several plant invaders of
North America. In this study, we examined whether aqueous leaf extracts
of Alliaria petiolata and Lonicera maackii, two invaders of deciduous
forests in North America, affected growth and reproduction of a target
nonmycorrhizal plant and whether effects varied across a soil fertility
gradient. While nutrient addition substantially improved the
performance of Arabidopsis thaliana grown in field soils in pots in a
growth room, addition of A. petiolata extracts to these soils had no
significant independent or interactive effects on growth or
reproduction. In contrast, addition of L. maackii extracts both
directly reduced growth and reproduction of A. thaliana and greatly
constrained increases in growth and reproduction of A. thaliana in
response to increasing nutrient availability. Use of a nonmycorrhizal
target plant revealed that effects of L. maackii were independent of
allelopathic effects on mycorrhizae, an effect attributed to A.
petiolata in other studies.
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