Affordable Access

Impact de la compétition et de l'allélopathie sur le trade-off entre défense et croissance pour deux espèces contrastées d'arbre.

Authors
  • Fernandez, C.
  • Monnier, Y.
  • Santonja, M.
  • Gallet, C.
  • Weston, L.A.
  • Prévosto, B.
  • Saunier, A.
  • Baldy, V.
  • Bousquet-Mélou, A.
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2016
Source
HAL-INRIA
Keywords
License
Unknown
External links

Abstract

In contrast to plant-animal interactions, the conceptual framework regarding the impact of secondary metabolites in mediating plant-plant interference is currently less well defined. Here, we address hypotheses about the role of chemically-mediated plant-plant interference (i.e., allelopathy) as a driver of Mediterranean forest dynamics. Growth and defense abilities of a pioneer (Pinus halepensis) and a late-successional (Quercus pubescens) Mediterranean forest species were evaluated under three different plant interference conditions: (i) allelopathy simulated by application of aqueous needle extracts of Pinus , (ii) resource competition created by the physical presence of a neighboring species (Pinus or Quercus), and (iii) a combination of both allelopathy and competition. After 24 months of experimentation in simulated field conditions, Quercus was more affected by plant interference treatments than was Pinus, and a hierarchical response to biotic interference (allelopathy < competition

Report this publication

Statistics

Seen <100 times