AI Article Synopsis

  • Strictly inherited Epichloë spp. fungi are symbiotic with certain grasses, potentially increasing host invasiveness in new areas, but varying environmental conditions can affect this relationship.
  • In a long-term study on meadow fescue grasses with varying endophyte infections, researchers found that initial grass populations persisted without becoming invasive for six years, regardless of endophyte levels.
  • After fertilizing plots to boost nutrient availability, while endophyte concentrations increased in some populations, the grasses still did not become more abundant or reduce plant community diversity, indicating that nutrient levels do not directly influence host invasiveness in this context.

Article Abstract

Strictly vertically transmitted (hereditary) Epichloë spp. fungal endophytes are symbionts with cool-season pooid host grasses. Such endophytes may increase host invasiveness in the non-native, introduced ranges. However, because costs and benefits for the host can vary with the growing conditions, the endophyte may become locally or temporally extinct when costs outweigh benefits. Our long-term field experiment involved the introduction of seven Schedonorus pratensis (meadow fescue) cultivars hosting Epichloë uncinata endophyte, which represent host-grass populations differing in genetic backgrounds and Epichloë infection frequencies, to an unmanaged old field. In the first 6 years, the host grasses persisted but did not become invasive in the plant community, regardless of their endophyte infection frequency. Subsequently, we hypothesized that increasing nutrient availability would decrease endophyte costs and thus increase the host's success and abundance. We fertilized half of the plots for four additional years and re-examined S. pratensis invasiveness. We predicted that increased nutrient availability would increase S. pratensis abundance and E. uncinata frequency and concentration, as well as decrease plant community diversity, relative to unfertilized plots. Fertilization increased endophyte concentrations in three low-endophyte host populations. However, E. uncinata did not enable S. pratensis populations to achieve high abundance or to reduce plant community diversity in the old field, with or without fertilization. Thus, nutrient availabililty and host invasiveness appear to be decoupled in this study system.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-021-04933-8DOI Listing

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