Long-term conditioning of soil by plantation eucalypts and pines does not affect growth of the native jarrah tree

被引:10
|
作者
Orozco-Aceves, Martha [1 ]
Standish, Rachel J. [2 ]
Tibbett, Mark [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Western Australia, Sch Earth & Environm, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia
[2] Univ Western Australia, Sch Plant Biol, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia
[3] Cranfield Univ, Cranfield Soil & Agrifood Inst, Cranfield MK43 0AL, Beds, England
关键词
Bauxite mining; Plant-soil feedback; Soil biology; Soil chemistry; Soil feedback; Restoration; MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES; INVASIVE PLANTS; RHIZOSPHERE; FEEDBACK; FOREST; STABILITY; NITROGEN; LITTER; ACIDS;
D O I
10.1016/j.foreco.2014.11.007
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
Plant species can condition the physico-chemical and biological properties of soil in ways that modify plant growth via plant-soil feedback (PSF). Plant growth can be positively affected, negatively affected or neutrally affected by soil conditioning by the same or other plant species. Soil conditioning by other plant species has particular relevance to ecological restoration of historic ecosystems because sites set aside for restoration are often conditioned by other, potentially non-native, plant species. We investigated changes in properties of jarrah forest soils after long-term (35 years) conditioning by pines (Pinus radiata), Sydney blue gums (Eucalyptus saligna), both non-native, plantation trees, and jarrah (Eucalyptus marginata; dominant native tree). Then, we tested the influence of the conditioned soils on the growth of jarrah seedlings. Blue gums and pines similarly conditioned the physico-chemical properties of soils, which differed from soil conditioning caused by jarrah. Especially important were the differences in conditioning of the properties C:N ratio, pH, and available K. The two eucalypt species similarly conditioned the biological properties of soil (i.e. community level physiological profile, numbers of fungal-feeding nematodes, omnivorous nematodes, and nematode channel ratio), and these differed from conditioning caused by pines. Species-specific conditioning of soil did not translate into differences in the amounts of biomass produced by jarrah seedlings and a neutral PSF was observed. In summary, we found that decades of soil conditioning by non-native plantation trees did not influence the growth of jarrah seedlings and will therefore not limit restoration of jarrah following the removal of the plantation trees. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:92 / 99
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Long-term livestock exclosure did not affect soil carbon in southern Ethiopian rangelands
    Aynekulu, Ermias
    Mekuria, Wolde
    Tsegaye, Diress
    Feyissa, Kenea
    Angassa, Ayana
    de Leeuw, Jan
    Shepherd, Keith
    GEODERMA, 2017, 307 : 1 - 7
  • [22] Red foxes enhance long-term tree growth near the Arctic treeline
    Lang, Jessica A.
    Roth, James D.
    Tardif, Jacques C.
    Markham, John H.
    ECOSPHERE, 2022, 13 (09):
  • [23] Using native trees and cacti to improve soil potential nitrogen fixation during long-term restoration of arid lands
    Nguyen E. Lopez-Lozano
    Moisés G. Carcaño-Montiel
    Yoav Bashan
    Plant and Soil, 2016, 403 : 317 - 329
  • [24] Long-term fertilization and residue return affect soil stoichiometry characteristics and labile soil organic matter fractions
    Luo, Shasha
    Gao, Qiang
    Wang, Shaojie
    Tian, Lei
    Zhou, Qi
    Li, Xiujun
    Tian, Chunjie
    PEDOSPHERE, 2020, 30 (05) : 703 - 713
  • [25] Using native trees and cacti to improve soil potential nitrogen fixation during long-term restoration of arid lands
    Lopez-Lozano, Nguyen E.
    Carcano-Montiel, Moises G.
    Bashan, Yoav
    PLANT AND SOIL, 2016, 403 (1-2) : 317 - 329
  • [26] Effect of organic substitution rates on soil quality and fungal community composition in a tea plantation with long-term fertilization
    Ji, Lingfei
    Ni, Kang
    Wu, Zhidan
    Zhang, Junwei
    Yi, Xiaoyun
    Yang, Xiangde
    Ling, Ning
    You, Zhiming
    Guo, Shiwei
    Ruan, Jianyun
    BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS, 2020, 56 (05) : 633 - 646
  • [27] Long-term nitrogen deposition does not exacerbate soil acidification in tropical broadleaf plantations
    Huang, Juan
    Zhang, Wei
    Li, Yuelin
    Wang, Senhao
    Mao, Jinhua
    Mo, Jiangming
    Zheng, Mianhai
    ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2021, 16 (11)
  • [28] Impacts of recurrent dry and wet years alter long-term tree growth trajectories
    Serra-Maluquer, Xavier
    Granda, Elena
    Camarero, Jesus J.
    Vila-Cabrera, Albert
    Jump, Alistair S.
    Sanchez-Salguero, Raul
    Sanguesa-Barreda, Gabriel
    Imbert, Juan B.
    Gazol, Antonio
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2021, 109 (03) : 1561 - 1574
  • [29] Constraining long-term model predictions for woody growth using tropical tree rings
    Xu, Xiangtao
    van der Sleen, Peter
    Groenendijk, Peter
    Vlam, Mart
    Medvigy, David
    Moorcroft, Paul
    Petticord, Daniel
    Ma, Yixin
    Zuidema, Pieter A.
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2024, 30 (01)
  • [30] Do long-term N additions affect the soil organic carbon pool in temperate grasslands?
    Liu, Yinghui
    Zhang, Jiaqi
    Li, Yue
    He, Pei
    Dong, Jingyi
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2022, 810