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ROOT PROFILES AND COMPETITION BETWEEN THE INVASIVE, EXOTIC PERENNIAL, CARPOBROTUS EDULIS, AND TWO NATIVE SHRUB SPECIES IN CALIFORNIA COASTAL SCRUB
Author(s) -
D'Antonio Carla M.,
Mahall Bruce E.
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.1002/j.1537-2197.1991.tb14492.x
Subject(s) - shrub , biology , xylem , perennial plant , botany , horticulture
The mat‐forming succulent, Carpobrotus edulis (Aizoaceae), surrounds and grows over many native plant species in California coastal communities. Two shrub species, Haplopappus ericoides and H. venetus var. sedoides, were found to have shallow root systems that occupied the same soil depths as those of C. edulis. In the presence of C. edulis, the normal rooting profiles of the shrubs were displaced downward, although partial overlap with C. edulis remained. Removal of C. edulis from around individuals of both shrub species resulted in higher predawn xylem pressure potentials in shrubs from the removal treatments as compared to controls, suggesting that the surrounding C. edulis was utilizing water that would otherwise have been available to these shrubs. In H. ericoides, predawn xylem pressure potentials of removal treatment shrubs remained higher than those of the controls throughout the remainder of the dry season even though these shrubs showed a marked increase in canopy area after removal of surrounding C. edulis. Removal of C. edulis from around H. venetus also initially led to higher predawn xylem pressure potentials in the removal shrubs as compared to the controls and increased production of new leaves. After this initial period the predawn xylem pressure potentials of the removal shrubs were not significantly different from those of controls, suggesting that the demand for water by the increased leaf areas eventually matched the enhanced water availability resulting from C. edulis removal. Also, the morphology of H. venetus shrubs changed to that more typical of unaffected individuals. Thus, C. edulis significantly affected not only the water relations of these two shrub species but also their shoot sizes and overall morphologies.