# Root-derived allelochemicals from Moringa oleifera regulate germination and early seedling growth in New Zealand pasture, native, and weed species

**Authors:** Blair Moses Kamanga, Paul Barrett, Donita L. Cartmill, Craig McGill, Andrea Clavijo McCormick

PMC · DOI: 10.1080/15592324.2026.2644120 · 2026-03-17

## TL;DR

This study explores how root chemicals from Moringa oleifera affect the growth of plants in New Zealand, finding that they can harm important pasture species like white clover.

## Contribution

The study identifies specific bioactive compounds from Moringa roots and shows their dose-dependent, species-specific allelopathic effects in New Zealand ecosystems.

## Key findings

- Moringa root extracts significantly inhibited the germination and growth of white clover, a key pasture species.
- Phenylpropanoids and benzenoids were the dominant bioactive compounds identified in the root extracts.
- The effects of allelochemicals varied by species and concentration, suggesting potential ecological impacts in New Zealand.

## Abstract

Moringa oleifera L. (moringa) is not currently commercially cultivated in New Zealand, but there is growing interest in its integration into farming systems. However, there are questions regarding its ecological impacts. One area of interest is its allelopathic traits, which may affect native and other introduced plant species. Hence, this study evauated the effects of root-derived moringa allelochemicals on the germination and seedling growth of pasture, weed an native species and employed untargeted metabolomics to identify potential bioactive compounds responsible for the observed effects, and their biosynthetic pathways. . Root extracts from two moringa provenances were assessed across concentration gradients (1–100%) in laboratory bioassays, while potted plant experiments were conducted under semi-controlled conditions to evaluate allelochemical-mediated plant–plant interactions.. Metabolomics analysis revealed several bioactive compounds with potential allelopathic activities dominated by phenylpropanoids and benzenoids, with relatively small contributions from organoheterocyclics, oxygenated compounds, and organic acids. Statistical analyses demonstrated a dose-dependent and species-specific response to moringa root allelochemicals, with white clover, a key pasture species in New Zealand, being the most adversely affected. Therefore, the utilisation of moringa within white clover pastoral systems may not be advised. Isolating and testing individual compounds will be essential for determining how moringa may influence plant growth and population dynamics in New Zealand pastoral and native ecosystems.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Moringa oleifera (taxon 3735)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** amino acid (MESH:D000596), 4-hydroxycoumarin (MESH:C068805), naringenin (MESH:C005273), luteolin (MESH:D047311), umbelliferone (MESH:C031477), ROS (MESH:D017382), isoquercetin (MESH:C016527), glucosinolate (MESH:D005961), apigenin (MESH:D047310), CoA (MESH:D003065), N2 (MESH:D009584), tyrosine (MESH:D014443), quercetin (MESH:D011794), scopoletin (MESH:D012603), flavonols (MESH:D044948), H2O (MESH:D014867), indole-3-carboxylic acid (MESH:C012382), coumarin (MESH:C030123), coumarins (MESH:D003374), flavonoid (MESH:D005419), alkaloid (MESH:D000470), isothiocyanates (MESH:D017879), CHCl3 (MESH:D002725), terpenoid (MESH:D013729), auxin (MESH:D007210), glycosides (MESH:D006027), isoquinoline (MESH:C039109), MRE (-), phenolic acids (MESH:C017616), L-Phenylalanine (MESH:D010649), Hydroxycinnamic acids (MESH:D003373), ACN (MESH:C084683), tryptophan (MESH:D014364), kaempferol (MESH:C006552), caffeic acid (MESH:C040048), flavone (MESH:C043562), flavonol (MESH:C041477), DOPA (MESH:D004295), tannins (MESH:D013634)
- **Species:** Moringa oleifera (horseradish tree, species) [taxon 3735], Blitum bonus-henricus (Good King Henry, species) [taxon 122298], Chenopodium album (common lambsquarters, species) [taxon 3559], Lolium perenne (perennial ryegrass, species) [taxon 4522], Digitaria sanguinalis (species) [taxon 121769], Eleusine indica (Dutch grass, species) [taxon 29674], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Trifolium repens (creeping white clover, species) [taxon 3899]

## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13003897/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13003897