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Does relatedness of natives used for soil conditioning influence plant-soil feedback of exotics?
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SYSNO ASEP 0357792 Document Type J - Journal Article R&D Document Type Journal Article Subsidiary J Článek ve WOS Title Does relatedness of natives used for soil conditioning influence plant-soil feedback of exotics? Author(s) Dostál, Petr (BU-J) RID, ORCID
Plačková, M. (CZ)Number of authors 2 Source Title Biological Invasions. - : Springer - ISSN 1387-3547
Roč. 13, č. 2 (2011), s. 331-340Number of pages 10 s. Language eng - English Country NL - Netherlands Keywords phylogenetic relatedness ; plant invasions ; soil microbiota Subject RIV EF - Botanics R&D Projects KJB600050713 GA AV ČR - Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic (AV ČR) CEZ AV0Z60050516 - BU-J (2005-2011) UT WOS 000285998700008 DOI 10.1007/s10530-010-9824-6 Annotation Naturalization hypothesis predicts that exotic genera with native representatives should be less successful because of an overlap in resource use and of the existence of common specialized enemies. We tested whether native congenerics have more negative impact on exotic species than heterogenerics by increasing the effects of soil pathogens. We failed to find an evidence for this hypothesis. Nevertheless, our results suggest that variations in invasion success of at least some exotics may be affected by species-specific interactions mediated by the soil biota. Workplace Institute of Botany Contact Martina Bartošová, martina.bartosova@ibot.cas.cz, ibot@ibot.cas.cz, Tel.: 271 015 242 ; Marie Jakšová, marie.jaksova@ibot.cas.cz, Tel.: 384 721 156-8 Year of Publishing 2011
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