CAB International
Researching invasive species

Detailed coverage of invasive species threatening livelihoods and the environment worldwide

The ISC is a constantly developing encyclopaedic resource containing:
Datasheets on over 1500 invasive species and animal diseases
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Title   Intraspecific variation in allelochemistry determines an invasive species' impact on soil microbial communities.

Author(s)   Lankau, R. A.

Author Affiliation   llinois Natural History Survey, Institute of Natural Resource Sustainability, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, Illinois, USA.

Journal article   Oecologia 2011 Vol. 165 No. 2 pp. 453-463

ISSN   0029-8549

DOI   10.1007/s00442-010-1736-8

Publisher information   Springer Berlin, Heidelberg, Germany

Language of Text   English

URL   http://springerlink.metapress.com/content/x033657g713u3547/

Record Number   20113054379




Abstract

Invasive species can benefit from altered species interactions in their new range, and by interfering with species interactions among native competitors. Since exotic invasions are generally studied at the species level, relatively little is known about intraspecific variation in the traits that determine an invader's effect on native species. Alliaria petiolata is a widespread and aggressive invader of forest understories that succeeds in part by interfering with mutualistic interactions between native plants and soil fungi. Here, I show that the impact of A. petiolata on soil microbial communities varied among individuals due to variation in their allelochemical concentrations. The differential impacts translated into varied effects on native tree growth, partly because A. petiolata's allelochemicals preferentially affected the most mutualistic fungal taxa. These results highlight the importance of considering the spatial and temporal variation in an invasive species' impacts for understanding and managing the invasion process.



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