Authors
Ylva Lekberg, James D Bever, Rebecca A Bunn, Ragan M Callaway, Miranda M Hart, Stephanie N Kivlin, John Klironomos, Beau G Larkin, John L Maron, Kurt O Reinhart, Michael Remke, Wim H Van der Putten
Publication date
2018/8
Source
Ecology letters
Volume
21
Issue
8
Pages
1268-1281
Description
Plants interact simultaneously with each other and with soil biota, yet the relative importance of competition vs. plant–soil feedback (PSF) on plant performance is poorly understood. Using a meta‐analysis of 38 published studies and 150 plant species, we show that effects of interspecific competition (either growing plants with a competitor or singly, or comparing inter‐ vs. intraspecific competition) and PSF (comparing home vs. away soil, live vs. sterile soil, or control vs. fungicide‐treated soil) depended on treatments but were predominantly negative, broadly comparable in magnitude, and additive or synergistic. Stronger competitors experienced more negative PSF than weaker competitors when controlling for density (inter‐ to intraspecific competition), suggesting that PSF could prevent competitive dominance and promote coexistence. When competition was measured against plants growing singly, the strength …
Total citations
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