Climate change opens new avenue for spread of invasive plants
Washington, Nov 20 : A new research by a team of scientists has suggested that climate change can open new avenues for spread of invasive plants.
The team’s findings indicate that certain plants could become invasive if they spread to places that were previously too cold for them.
“This paper is the first to suggest that the mechanisms that aid invasive species when they move from one continent to the next may actually work within continents when climate change gradually extends the distributional range of a species,” said Koen J. F. Verhoeven, an evolutionary biologist at The Netherlands Institute of Ecology.
“Plants may be able to outrun, so to speak, their enemies from the southern range,” he added.
Often, exotic plants and animals are introduced to new continents or geographic regions by travelers and commerce.
Separation from their natural enemies can drive their invasive success in the new range. But, increasingly, the distribution of many species is shifting because of climate change and changes in land use.
Led by scientists Tim Engelkes, Elly Morrien and Wim van der Putten of The Netherlands Institute of Ecology, with collaborators from the University of Florida, Wageningen University and Leiden University, the researchers compared exotic plant species that had recently established in Millingerwaard, a nature preserve in The Netherlands, with related native plant species from the same area.
“We set out to see whether the native and exotics responded differently to natural enemies such as herbivores or microorganisms in the soil,” said Lauren McIntyre, an associate professor of molecular genetics and microbiology in UF’s College of Medicine and a member of the UF Genetics Institute.
Scientists grew six exotic and nine native plant species in pots with field-collected soil from the Millingerwaard area, allowing natural soil pathogenic microbes to accumulate in the pots.
Then, they removed the plants and replanted the soils with the same plant species.
The growth of native plants was reduced far more than the growth of exotic species, indicating natives were more vulnerable to natural soil-borne microbes.
In addition, all plant species were exposed to North African locusts and a widespread species of aphid.
These herbivores were not expected to show a preference for either the native or the exotic species. But, they preferred the native plants and left the exotic ones relatively alone.
According to researchers, the findings help to better assess the ecological consequences of climate change. (ANI)