• Title of article

    Plant invasion of native grassland on serpentine soils has no major effects upon selected physical and biological properties

  • Author/Authors

    Batten، نويسنده , , Katharine M. and Six، نويسنده , , Johan and Scow، نويسنده , , Kate M. and Rillig، نويسنده , , Matthias C.، نويسنده ,

  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    2277
  • To page
    2282
  • Abstract
    Plant invasions alter soil microbial community composition; this study examined whether invasion-induced changes in the soil microbial community were reflected in soil aggregation, an ecosystem property strongly influenced by microorganisms. Soil aggregation is regulated by many biological factors including roots, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal hyphae, and microbially-derived carbon compounds. We measured root biomass, fungal-derived glomalin-related soil protein (GRSP), and aggregate mean weight diameter in serpentine soils dominated by an invasive plant (Aegilops triuncialis (goatgrass) or Centaurea solstitialis (yellow starthistle)), or by native plants (Lasthenia californica and Plantago erecta, or Hemizonia congesta). Root biomass tended to increase in invaded soils. GRSP concentrations were lower in goatgrass-dominated soils than native soils. In contrast, starthistle dominated soil contained a higher amount of one fraction of GRSP, easily extractable immunoreactive soil protein (EE-IRSP) and a lower amount of another GRSP fraction, easily extractible Bradford reactive soil protein (EE-BRSP). Soil aggregation increased with goatgrass invasion, but did not increase with starthistle invasion. In highly aggregated serpentine soils, small increases in soil aggregation accompanying plant invasion were not related to changes in GRSP and likely have limited ecological significance.
  • Keywords
    Aegilops triuncialis , Glomalin-related soil protein , grasslands , Soil aggregate stability , Invasion ecology , Centaurea solstitialis
  • Journal title
    Astroparticle Physics
  • Record number

    1995798