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Functional differentiation of invasive and native plants along a leaf efficiency/safety trade-off

Authors :
Vanessa Tonet
Enrico Tordoni
Miris Castello
Andrea Nardini
Francesco Petruzzellis
Chiara Palandrani
Tadeja Savi
Giovanni Bacaro
Martina Tomasella
Petruzzellis, Francesco
Tordoni, Enrico
Tomasella, Martina
Savi, Tadeja
Tonet, Vanessa
Palandrani, Chiara
Castello, Miri
Nardini, Andrea
Bacaro, Giovanni
Source :
Environmental and Experimental Botany. 188:104518
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Plant invasive alien species (IAS) are a serious threat to biodiversity. Several studies have compared the functional features of IAS and native species to identify the functional traits, or set of traits, favouring the process of invasion. However, most of these studies analysed traits only related to carbon and nutrients, and the inclusion of traits related to water use and acquisition might be useful to describe the functions underlying plant invasion. Here we present an analysis of cost-related, hydraulic and leaf vein traits measured on a large assemblage of woody and herbaceous native and invasive species (93 species in total, 78 natives and 15 IAS), that co-occur in site types in the Mediterranean area with different water availability (i.e. xeric, mesic and hydric sites). IAS shared lower leaf construction costs and drought resistance, but potential higher efficiency in water transport (i.e. higher values of vein length per unit area/mass) than native species. Moreover, IAS and native species separated along the trade-offs drawn by the measured traits, suggesting that hydraulic and vein traits could set an important axis of variation between IAS and native species. At last, IAS tended to occupy the fast-growth region of the functional space, independently of growth form and site type. Hydraulic and vein traits provide stronger mechanistic linkages between construction costs and photosynthetic and growth rates, thus possibly playing a central role in determining the invasive potential of IAS. IAS could reduce costs associated with leaf construction and resistance to drought stress having, at the same time, high efficiency of water transport and photosynthetic rates by developing a denser venation network, translating to higher growth rates than native and more conservative species.

Details

ISSN :
00988472
Volume :
188
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental and Experimental Botany
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6f172560d4215660e83497d20b130279
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envexpbot.2021.104518