Factors Affecting Seed Germination of the Invasive Species Symphyotrichum lanceolatum and Their Implication for Invasion Success
Abstract
Invasive species Symphyotrichum lanceolatum (Willd.) G. L. Nesom is spreading uncontrollably along wet habitats as well as in disturbed ecosystems. All those habitats function as corridors that facilitate seed dispersal. One way to prevent the spread of invasive species is to know their reproductive ecology. The present study evaluates the potential for generative reproduction of S. lanceolatum and determines how different temperatures, amounts of nutrients, and light regimes, affect seed germination. Seeds collected from 13 natural populations were germinated at four fluctuating temperature regimes (15/6, 20/10, 30/15, and 35/20 degrees C). To test the influence of nitrate on seed germination, two KNO3 concentrations were used (5 mM and 50 mM solution). For each treatment, three replicates of 30 seeds were placed in complete darkness or a 14 h photoperiod. The results showed that the germination increased with increasing temperature. The optimal temperature regimes were 30/15 degrees ...C and 35/20 degrees C with approximately 88% germination. The overall effect of KNO3 on germination was positive. The concentration of 50 mM KNO3 had a less stimulating effect compared to 5 mM KNO3. Seeds showed sensitivity to lack of light during germination but were able to germinate in a significant percentage in such conditions. Considering that S. lanceolatum often occurs in disturbed sites, these results suggest that seed reaction to alternating temperature, nutrients concentration, and light can be determining factors that affect seed germination of this species and, thus, its spread.
Keywords:
Symphyotrichum lanceolatum / seed / invasive plants / invasion success / generative reproduction / disturbed sitesSource:
Plants-Basel, 2022, 11, 7Funding / projects:
- Ministry of Science, Technological Development and Innovation of the Republic of Serbia, institutional funding - 200169 (University of Belgrade, Faculty of Forestry) (RS-MESTD-inst-2020-200169)
- University of Belgrade-Faculty of Forestry
DOI: 10.3390/plants11070969
ISSN: 2223-7747
PubMed: 35406949
WoS: 000782010400001
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85127441129
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Institution/Community
Šumarski fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Nešić, Marija AU - Obratov-Petković, Dragica AU - Skočajić, Dragana AU - Bjedov, Ivana AU - Čule, Nevena PY - 2022 UR - https://omorika.sfb.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1332 AB - Invasive species Symphyotrichum lanceolatum (Willd.) G. L. Nesom is spreading uncontrollably along wet habitats as well as in disturbed ecosystems. All those habitats function as corridors that facilitate seed dispersal. One way to prevent the spread of invasive species is to know their reproductive ecology. The present study evaluates the potential for generative reproduction of S. lanceolatum and determines how different temperatures, amounts of nutrients, and light regimes, affect seed germination. Seeds collected from 13 natural populations were germinated at four fluctuating temperature regimes (15/6, 20/10, 30/15, and 35/20 degrees C). To test the influence of nitrate on seed germination, two KNO3 concentrations were used (5 mM and 50 mM solution). For each treatment, three replicates of 30 seeds were placed in complete darkness or a 14 h photoperiod. The results showed that the germination increased with increasing temperature. The optimal temperature regimes were 30/15 degrees C and 35/20 degrees C with approximately 88% germination. The overall effect of KNO3 on germination was positive. The concentration of 50 mM KNO3 had a less stimulating effect compared to 5 mM KNO3. Seeds showed sensitivity to lack of light during germination but were able to germinate in a significant percentage in such conditions. Considering that S. lanceolatum often occurs in disturbed sites, these results suggest that seed reaction to alternating temperature, nutrients concentration, and light can be determining factors that affect seed germination of this species and, thus, its spread. T2 - Plants-Basel T1 - Factors Affecting Seed Germination of the Invasive Species Symphyotrichum lanceolatum and Their Implication for Invasion Success IS - 7 VL - 11 DO - 10.3390/plants11070969 UR - conv_1626 ER -
@article{ author = "Nešić, Marija and Obratov-Petković, Dragica and Skočajić, Dragana and Bjedov, Ivana and Čule, Nevena", year = "2022", abstract = "Invasive species Symphyotrichum lanceolatum (Willd.) G. L. Nesom is spreading uncontrollably along wet habitats as well as in disturbed ecosystems. All those habitats function as corridors that facilitate seed dispersal. One way to prevent the spread of invasive species is to know their reproductive ecology. The present study evaluates the potential for generative reproduction of S. lanceolatum and determines how different temperatures, amounts of nutrients, and light regimes, affect seed germination. Seeds collected from 13 natural populations were germinated at four fluctuating temperature regimes (15/6, 20/10, 30/15, and 35/20 degrees C). To test the influence of nitrate on seed germination, two KNO3 concentrations were used (5 mM and 50 mM solution). For each treatment, three replicates of 30 seeds were placed in complete darkness or a 14 h photoperiod. The results showed that the germination increased with increasing temperature. The optimal temperature regimes were 30/15 degrees C and 35/20 degrees C with approximately 88% germination. The overall effect of KNO3 on germination was positive. The concentration of 50 mM KNO3 had a less stimulating effect compared to 5 mM KNO3. Seeds showed sensitivity to lack of light during germination but were able to germinate in a significant percentage in such conditions. Considering that S. lanceolatum often occurs in disturbed sites, these results suggest that seed reaction to alternating temperature, nutrients concentration, and light can be determining factors that affect seed germination of this species and, thus, its spread.", journal = "Plants-Basel", title = "Factors Affecting Seed Germination of the Invasive Species Symphyotrichum lanceolatum and Their Implication for Invasion Success", number = "7", volume = "11", doi = "10.3390/plants11070969", url = "conv_1626" }
Nešić, M., Obratov-Petković, D., Skočajić, D., Bjedov, I.,& Čule, N.. (2022). Factors Affecting Seed Germination of the Invasive Species Symphyotrichum lanceolatum and Their Implication for Invasion Success. in Plants-Basel, 11(7). https://doi.org/10.3390/plants11070969 conv_1626
Nešić M, Obratov-Petković D, Skočajić D, Bjedov I, Čule N. Factors Affecting Seed Germination of the Invasive Species Symphyotrichum lanceolatum and Their Implication for Invasion Success. in Plants-Basel. 2022;11(7). doi:10.3390/plants11070969 conv_1626 .
Nešić, Marija, Obratov-Petković, Dragica, Skočajić, Dragana, Bjedov, Ivana, Čule, Nevena, "Factors Affecting Seed Germination of the Invasive Species Symphyotrichum lanceolatum and Their Implication for Invasion Success" in Plants-Basel, 11, no. 7 (2022), https://doi.org/10.3390/plants11070969 ., conv_1626 .