Differences in growth and competition between plants of a naturalized and an invasive population of

Binama B, Müller C (2024)
Ecology and Evolution 14(3).

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
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Binama, Blaise; Müller, CarolineUniBi
Abstract / Bemerkung
The global shift of species' distributions has led to high numbers of noninvasive naturalized plants and the accumulation of invasive species within ecosystems. Competition between species may influence population dynamics, but little is known about the impacts of competition between conspecifics of naturalized and invasive populations. We investigated several plant traits at initial growth and regrowth following artificial defoliation in intra and interpopulation competition. Therefore, we used plants ofBunias orientalisfrom one noninvasive naturalized and one invasive population grown alone or in competition of two or three. Plants from the naturalized population were expected to be less competitive than plants from the invasive population, reflecting their differential impact in the introduced range. Independent of status, intrapopulation competition was expected to have less negative impacts on plants than interpopulation competition. Our results show that competition impacted mostly growth‐ rather than physiology‐related traits. The relative magnitude of intra and interpopulation competition differed among plant traits at the first and second harvest. Plants of the invasive population outperformed the naturalized population by allocating relatively more resources to the aboveground biomass and producing more and longer leaves particularly when grown in competition against two plants. Moreover, plants of the invasive population were more competitive, which may influence their successful establishment and range expansion in the introduced range, but growth patterns differed after artificial defoliation. Although evolution of intrapopulation competition in naturalized and invasive ranges may be expected, interpopulation competition seems to adversely impact the performance of the naturalized plant population ofB. orientalisstudied here. Apart from the status (naturalized vs. invasive), other factors may have had an influence on plant performance. Thus, further research is needed with more naturalized and invasive populations to test the generality of our findings and to isolate the specific mechanisms driving differences in competitiveness.
Erscheinungsjahr
2024
Zeitschriftentitel
Ecology and Evolution
Band
14
Ausgabe
3
ISSN
2045-7758
eISSN
2045-7758
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2988021

Zitieren

Binama B, Müller C. Differences in growth and competition between plants of a naturalized and an invasive population of . Ecology and Evolution. 2024;14(3).
Binama, B., & Müller, C. (2024). Differences in growth and competition between plants of a naturalized and an invasive population of . Ecology and Evolution, 14(3). https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.11153
Binama, Blaise, and Müller, Caroline. 2024. “Differences in growth and competition between plants of a naturalized and an invasive population of ”. Ecology and Evolution 14 (3).
Binama, B., and Müller, C. (2024). Differences in growth and competition between plants of a naturalized and an invasive population of . Ecology and Evolution 14.
Binama, B., & Müller, C., 2024. Differences in growth and competition between plants of a naturalized and an invasive population of . Ecology and Evolution, 14(3).
B. Binama and C. Müller, “Differences in growth and competition between plants of a naturalized and an invasive population of ”, Ecology and Evolution, vol. 14, 2024.
Binama, B., Müller, C.: Differences in growth and competition between plants of a naturalized and an invasive population of . Ecology and Evolution. 14, (2024).
Binama, Blaise, and Müller, Caroline. “Differences in growth and competition between plants of a naturalized and an invasive population of ”. Ecology and Evolution 14.3 (2024).
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