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Article
Soil History as a Primary Control on Plant Invasion in Abandoned Agricultural Fields
Journal of Applied Ecology (2006)
  • Karen H. Beard, Utah State University
Abstract
1. Abandoned agricultural (AA) fields are often invaded by exotic plants. This observation has been difficult to explain because agricultural practices change nearly every aspect of an ecosystem. Restoring native plants to AA fields is likely to require a prioritized understanding of the many mechanisms through which agriculture encourages exotic and discourages native plant growth. 2. Using 660 experimental plots in three sites in Methow Valley, Washington, USA, we determined the relative role of neighbour removal, propagule addition, plant-soil feedback, soil disturbance and fungal restriction to explain why exotics cover 38% of the ground in AA fields and 3% of the ground in non-agricultural (NA) fields. 3. After three growing seasons, neighbour removal improved exotic growth from 3% to 11% cover in NA fields but had no effect in AA fields. Propagule addition did not increase exotic growth above natural recruitment. Differences in soil history, a proxy for plant-soil feedback, explained an increase in exotic growth from 9% in NA fields to 39% in AA fields. Soil disturbance improved exotic growth from 9% to 16% cover in NA fields but had no effect in AA fields. Fungicide reduced exotic growth from 39% to 28% cover in AA soils but had no effect on exotic growth in NA soils. Native plant growth never differed by more than 5% cover among treatments...
Keywords
  • competition; disturbance; exotic invasion; native plant; plant-soil feedback; shrub-steppe; soil microbial community; tillage
Disciplines
Publication Date
2006
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2664.2006.01192.x
Citation Information
Kulmatiski, A., K.H. Beard, and J.M. Stark. 2006. Soil history as a primary control on plant invasion in abandoned agricultural fields. Journal of Applied Ecology 43(5):868-876.