Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Relationships between Methylobacteria and Glyphosate with Native and Invasive Plant Species : Implications for Restoration
Author
Irvine, Irina C
Witter, Marti S
Brigham, Christy A
Martiny, Jennifer B H
Publisher
Restoration Ecology
Publication Year
2013
Body

After removing invasive plants, whether by herbicides or other means, typical restoration design focuses on rebuilding native plant communities while disregarding soil microbial communities. However, microbial-plant interactions are known to influence the relative success of native versus invasive plants. Therefore, the abundance and composition of soil microorganisms may affect restoration efforts. We assessed the effect of herbicide treatment on phytosymbiotic pink-pigmented facultative methylotrophic (PPFM) bacteria and the potential consequences of native and invasive species establishment post-herbicide treatment in the lab and in a coastal sage scrub (CSS)/grassland restoration site. Lab tests showed that 4% glyphosate reduced PPFM abundance. PPFM addition to seeds increased seedling length of a native plant (Artemisia californica) but not an invasive plant (Hirschfeldia incana). At the restoration site, methanol addition (a PPFM substrate) improved native bunchgrass (Nassella pulchra) germination and size by 35% over controls. In a separate multispecies field experiment, PPFM addition stimulated the germination of N. pulchra, but not that of three invasive species. Neither PPFM nor methanol addition strongly affected the growth of any plant species. Overall, these results are consistent with the hypothesis that PPFMs have a greater benefit to native than invasive species. Together, these experiments suggest that methanol or PPFM addition could be useful in improving CSS/grassland restorations. Future work should test PPFM effects on additional species and determine how these results vary under different environmental conditions.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
21
Journal Number
1
Journal Pages
105-113
Journal Name
Restoration Ecology
Keywords
Herbicide
invasive species
methanol
Methylobacterium
methylotrophic bacteria
PPFM
restoration ecology
Alien invasive species
soils
soil bacteria
Los Angeles County
California