Root hemiparasites and plant diversity in experimental grassland communities

Abstract
Summary: 1 We studied the relationship between the diversity of grassland communities and the effects of the generalist hemiparasitic plant Rhinanthus alectorolophus. We compared resistance against biomass loss as a consequence of infection, performance of the parasite and resistance of the parasitized communities to invasion by other plant species. Seeds of the parasite were sown into experimental plots containing 1, 2, 4, 8 or 32 plant species belonging to one or more of three functional groups (grasses, legumes and non‐leguminous herbs). 2 We predicted that infection will reduce host biomass, total community biomass and resistance to invasion, particularly in host communities with low diversity, but that the performance of the parasite will be at its lower level in such communities. 3 The presence of the parasite caused an overall reduction in host biomass per plot, which was mainly due to a strong reduction in the biomass of grasses. As predicted, the effect was smaller in communities with greater functional diversity. However, total community biomass (including the parasite biomass) was increased by more than a third in infected communities of one or two host species, while the parasite had no effect on total biomass of species‐rich communities. 4 Germination of the parasite was hardly influenced by the diversity of its host community, but early survival decreased with increasing number of functional groups and was lower in plots with legumes than without. However, our hypothesis that the performance of the surviving parasites would benefit from a high functional diversity of hosts was supported. Parasite biomass per individual and per m2 increased with the number of functional groups in the host community, as did reproductive potential. 5 Death of the parasite led to a higher proportion of bare ground in communities when the previously infected communities had low functional diversity, thus enabling subsequent colonization by weeds.