Invasive Plants Versus Their New and Old Neighbors: A Mechanism for Exotic Invasion
Top Cited Papers
- 20 October 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 290 (5491) , 521-523
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.290.5491.521
Abstract
Invading exotic plants are thought to succeed primarily because they have escaped their natural enemies, not because of novel interactions with their new neighbors. However, we find that Centaurea diffusa , a noxious weed in North America, has much stronger negative effects on grass species from North America than on closely related grass species from communities to which Centaurea is native. Centaurea 's advantage against North American species appears to be due to differences in the effects of its root exudates and how these root exudates affect competition for resources. Our results may help to explain why some exotic species so successfully invade natural plant communities.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Positive interactions in plant communities and the individualistic-continuum conceptOecologia, 1997
- Root Communication Mechanisms and Intracommunity Distributions of Two Mojave Desert ShrubsEcology, 1992
- Experimental Studies of Community Evolution II: The Ecological Basis of the Response to Community SelectionEvolution, 1990
- Species Interference in White Clover-Ryegrass MixturesJournal of Ecology, 1990
- The Growth, Distribution and Neighbour Relationships of Trifolium Repens in a Permanent Pasture. V. The Coevolution of CompetitorsJournal of Ecology, 1989
- Competition for Phosphorus: Differential Uptake from Dual-Isotope—Labeled Soil Interspaces Between Shrub and GrassScience, 1985
- Individualistic Growth Response of Tundra Plant Species to Environmental Manipulations in the FieldEcology, 1985
- Equivalence of Competitors in Plant Communities: A Null Hypothesis and a Field Experimental ApproachAmerican Journal of Botany, 1983
- Neighbour relationships in grass–legume communities. II. Temporal stability and community evolutionCanadian Journal of Botany, 1979
- The Toxic Action of Certain Organic Plant ConstituentsBotanical Gazette, 1908