Search
tag

root-ecology

1 article
Invasive plants have stronger root recognition capabilities than native plants.

PubMed · 2026-05-22

Invasive plants are better than native plants at detecting and avoiding their own roots underground, helping them reduce self-competition. Crucially, invasive plants maintain this ability even in disturbed soils, while natives lose it — giving invaders a lasting competitive edge.

1

In split-root experiments across five invasive-native plant pairs, invasive plants consistently reduced root allocation toward their own kind more strongly than native counterparts.

2

Native plants showed normal root segregation in fresh soil, but lost it entirely when grown in soil previously conditioned by either invasive or native plants; invasive plants were unaffected in either soil type.

3

The collapse of root segregation in native plants was correlated with shifts in soil fungal and bacterial community composition caused by prior plant occupancy.

mail Weekly plant science — one email, Saturdays.