2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.flora.2022.152136
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Maintained nutrient accumulation in invasive Solidago canadensis in response to competition

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…The two co-occurring species responded to the treatments of clipping and the density of S. canadensis similarly. However, the growth of I. cylindrica seemed to be more affected, probably because of the lower competitive capacity of this species [66]. These results suggest that there are variations in competitive tolerance between different co-occurring species and that screening co-occurring species with high competition tolerance may promote initial restoration success [58].…”
Section: The Effects Of S Canadensis On Biomass Accumulation Of the C...mentioning
confidence: 87%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The two co-occurring species responded to the treatments of clipping and the density of S. canadensis similarly. However, the growth of I. cylindrica seemed to be more affected, probably because of the lower competitive capacity of this species [66]. These results suggest that there are variations in competitive tolerance between different co-occurring species and that screening co-occurring species with high competition tolerance may promote initial restoration success [58].…”
Section: The Effects Of S Canadensis On Biomass Accumulation Of the C...mentioning
confidence: 87%
“…The mechanisms for the suppression effects of early established plants on later arriving plants may include shading from invasive plants [67,68], early pre-emption of essential resources in soil [69,70], suppression of native plants using allelopathic effects [71,72], and an altered soil biota community [73,74]. S. canadensis exhibited significant inhibiting effects on the growth of the two co-occurring species when they were not clipped or when clipped at a higher density, which offers an explanation for their dominance in the field [66,75]. Clipping significantly ameliorated the suppression effects, suggesting shading played an important role.…”
Section: The Effects Of S Canadensis On Biomass Accumulation Of the C...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The inoculation of Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi with S. canadensis increased the growth and its competitive ability to suppress neighbouring native plants [84]. The invasion success of S. canadensis may be attributed to its ability to maintain nutrient accumulation in shoots in response to competition with native plant communities [85]. Yang et al [86] discovered that S. canadensis exhibited tolerance to heavy metal stress, while Bielecka et al [87] found that this species could act as a phytostabilizer of Pb and Zn in heavily contaminated soils.…”
Section: Behind the Invasiveness Of S Canadensismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, its roots have many well-developed rhizome structures, each of which can sprout into a separate individual [3]. S canadensis also has a higher nutrient accumulation capacity than native plants [4]. Competing with native species for water and fertilizer.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%