The interaction between litter input and soil microbial community regulates the intraspecific allelopathic effects of Solanum rostratum Dunal
Huixian Liu, Yujuan Zhang, Juan Qiu, Shuai Liu, Nusratgul Anwar, Lamei Jiang, Fang Wang, Jing Deng, Shanshan Wang, Dunyan Tan

TL;DR
This study shows that litter from Solanum rostratum Dunal inhibits its own seedling growth, and soil microbes help reduce this effect by breaking down harmful compounds.
Contribution
The study reveals how soil microbial communities modulate intraspecific allelopathy in Solanum rostratum Dunal.
Findings
Litter from Solanum rostratum Dunal inhibits seedling growth, with stronger effects in sterile soil.
Soil microbes like Sphingomonas and Dongia reduce allelopathic effects by degrading harmful compounds.
Phenolic and ester compounds in soil negatively correlate with seedling growth.
Abstract
The "novel weapon hypothesis" posits that invasive plants suppress native species by releasing allelochemicals, which is a crucial factor for their successful invasion. While most studies focus on interspecific allelopathy, with insufficient attention paid to intraspecific allelopathy. This study employed an in pot experiment with different litter concentrations (0, 5, 10, 20 g/kg) to cultivate Solanum rostratum Dunal seedlings in both sterilized and unsterilized soils. The plant growth parameters, soil physicochemical properties, soil metabolites, and soil microbial communities were measured, and their interrelationships were also analyzed. The results indicated that the litter from Solanum rostratum Dunal significantly inhibited the growth of its seedlings, and the inhibitory effect is even stronger in sterile soil. Additionally, the addition of litter decreased the soil pH value,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAllelopathy and phytotoxic interactions · Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies · Chemical synthesis and alkaloids
