Life (Nov 2022)

Differences in Phenotypic Plasticity between Invasive and Native Plants Responding to Three Environmental Factors

  • Luna Zhang,
  • Anqun Chen,
  • Yanjiao Li,
  • Duohui Li,
  • Shiping Cheng,
  • Liping Cheng,
  • Yinzhan Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/life12121970
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 12
p. 1970

Abstract

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The phenotypic plasticity hypothesis suggests that exotic plants may have greater phenotypic plasticity than native plants. However, whether phenotypic changes vary according to different environmental factors has not been well studied. We conducted a multi-species greenhouse experiment to study the responses of six different phenotypic traits, namely height, leaf number, specific leaf area, total biomass, root mass fraction, and leaf mass fraction, of native and invasive species to nutrients, water, and light. Each treatment was divided into two levels: high and low. In the nutrient addition experiment, only the leaf mass fraction and root mass fraction of the plants supported the phenotypic plasticity hypothesis. Then, none of the six traits supported the phenotypic plasticity hypothesis in the water or light treatment experiments. The results show that, for different environmental factors and phenotypes, the phenotypic plasticity hypothesis of plant invasion is inconsistent. When using the phenotypic plasticity hypothesis to explain plant invasion, variations in environmental factors and phenotypes should be considered.

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