Background And Aims: Reduced snow cover and increased air temperature variability are predicted to expose overwintering herbaceous plants to more severe freezing in some northern temperate regions. Legumes are a key functional group that may exhibit lower freezing tolerance than other species in these regions, but this trend has been observed only for non-native legumes. Our aim was to confirm if this trend is restricted to non-native legumes or whether native legumes in these regions also exhibit low freezing tolerance.
Methods: First, we transplanted legumes (five non-native species and four native species) into either an old field (non-native) or a prairie (native) and used snow removal to expose the plots to increased soil freezing. Second, we grew plants in mesocosms (old field) and pots (prairie species) and exposed them in controlled environment chambers to a range of freezing treatments (control, 0, -5 or -10 °C) in winter or spring. We assessed freezing responses by comparing differences in biomass, cover and nodulation between freezing (or snow removal) treatments and controls.
Key Results: Among legume species, lower freezing tolerance was positively correlated with a lower proportion of nodulated plants and active nodules, and under controlled conditions, freezing-induced reductions in above-ground biomass were lower on average in native legumes than in non-native legumes. Nevertheless, both non-native and native legumes (except Desmodium canadense) exhibited greater reductions in biomass in response to increased freezing than their non-leguminous neighbours, both in controlled environments and in the field.
Conclusions: These results demonstrate that both native and non-native legumes exhibit low freezing tolerance relative to other herbaceous species in northern temperate plant communities. By reducing legume biomass and nodulation, increased soil freezing could reduce nitrogen inputs into these systems.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aob/mcae072 | DOI Listing |
Sci Total Environ
January 2025
Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Iowa State University, Ames, IA, USA; Department of Plant Pathology, Entomology and Microbiology, Iowa State University, Ames, IA, USA. Electronic address:
Health and population status of bees is negatively affected by anthropogenic stressors, many of which co-occur in agricultural settings. While pollinator habitat (often involving plantings of native forbs) holds promise to benefit both managed and wild bees, important issues remain unresolved. These include whether conventional, broad-spectrum insecticide use negates these benefits and how non-native, managed honey bees affect wild bees in these areas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlants (Basel)
November 2024
Biodiversity Conservation Laboratory, Department of Environment, University of the Aegean, 81100 Mytilene, Greece.
A checklist of Lesvos Island's non-native vascular flora is presented. Through the literature and a roadside survey, we recorded 187 non-native plant taxa, representing 12% of the total regional flora. A total of 37 taxa were reported for the first time for Lesvos, including three taxa that are also new to the Greek non-native flora.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Biol Sci
October 2024
TERRA Associate Laboratory, Department of Life Sciences, Centre for Functional Ecology, University of Coimbra, Calçada Martim de Freitas, Coimbra 3000-456, Portugal.
Non-native trees disrupt ecological processes vital to native plant communities. We studied how forests dominated by and affect the role of birds as dual pollinators and seed dispersers in a region heavily impacted by these two non-native species. We compared bird-plant interactions in the native and in the two non-native forest types.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Bot
July 2024
Department of Biology, University of Western Ontario, 1151 Richmond St. N, London, ON N6A 5B7, Canada.
Background And Aims: Reduced snow cover and increased air temperature variability are predicted to expose overwintering herbaceous plants to more severe freezing in some northern temperate regions. Legumes are a key functional group that may exhibit lower freezing tolerance than other species in these regions, but this trend has been observed only for non-native legumes. Our aim was to confirm if this trend is restricted to non-native legumes or whether native legumes in these regions also exhibit low freezing tolerance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsects
February 2024
Department of Entomology, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801, USA.
Are parasitoids less likely to find their Lepidoptera hosts on non-native hostplants than native hostplants? We predicted that with longer periods of coevolution between herbivores and the plants they consume, the parasitoids that provide top-down control would be more attuned to finding their hosts on native plants. To test this hypothesis, we collected immature stages of sulfur butterflies (the cloudless sulfur () and the orange-barred sulfur () over a three-year period (2008-2011) from native and ornamental hostplants in the genus in three different parts of the urban landscape of Miami, Florida, USA. We reared the immature specimens to pupation and either eclosion of adults or emergence of parasitoids and compared the levels of parasitization among the three areas, and among native vs.
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