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Phylogenetic conservatism in plant‐soil feedback and its implications for plant abundance
135
Citations
41
References
2014
Year
BiodiversityPlant-soil InteractionBotanyNatural SciencesPlant-soil RelationshipEvolutionary BiologyExotic Plant SpeciesPlant‐soil FeedbackPlant‐field AbundanceSoil BiodiversityPhylogenetic ConservatismPlant AbundanceMycelial InteractionSoil Ecology
Abstract We examined whether plant‐soil feedback and plant‐field abundance were phylogenetically conserved. For 57 co‐occurring native and exotic plant species from an old field in Canada, we collected a data set on the effects of three soil biota treatments on plant growth: net whole‐soil feedback (combined effects of mutualists and antagonists), feedback with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi ( AMF ) collected from soils of conspecific plants, and feedback with Glomus etunicatum , a dominant mycorrhizal fungus. We found phylogenetic signal in both net whole‐soil feedback and feedback with AMF of conspecifics; conservatism was especially strong among native plants but absent among exotics. The abundance of plants in the field was also conserved, a pattern underlain by shared plant responses to soil biota. We conclude that soil biota influence the abundance of close plant relatives in nature.
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