The “Trojan horse” strategy : seed fungal endophyte symbiosis helps to explain the invasion success of the grass, Poa annua, in Maritime Antarctica
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Date
Authors
Molina-Montenegro, Marco A.
Ballesteros, Gabriel I.
Acuna-Rodríguez, Ian S.
Pertierra, Luis R.
Greve, Michelle
Richardson, David M.
Convey, Peter
Biersma, Elisabeth M.
Goodall-Copestake, William P.
Newsham, Kevin K.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Abstract
AIM : Poa annua L. (annual bluegrass) is presently the sole invasive vascular plant species
to have successfully established in Maritime Antarctica, where it poses a significant
conservation threat to native plant species. However, the reasons for its
success in the region have yet to be established. Here, we determined whether the
invasiveness of P. annua, and its competitiveness with the native Antarctic hairgrass
Deschampsia antarctica, is influenced by symbioses formed with seed fungal endophytes,
and whether plants derived from seeds from four global regions differ in their
performance.
LOCATIONS : Four regions (Maritime Antarctica, sub-Antarctica,
South America and
Europe).
METHODS : Endophyte frequency was measured in P. annua seeds collected from the
four regions. The germination, survival, biomass accumulation, flowering and competitiveness
with D. antarctica of P. annua plants grown from endophyte-uncolonised
and uncolonised seeds was determined in the laboratory. The effects of endophytes
on P. annua seed germination and survival and seedling osmoprotection were also assessed
in the Maritime Antarctic natural environment using locally-sourced
seeds.
RESULTS : Endophytes were at least twice as frequent in seeds from Maritime Antarctica
than in those from other regions. A higher proportion of endophyte-colonized
seeds
germinated and survived than did uncolonised seeds, but only when they originated
from Maritime Antarctica. Seed endophytes increased the competitiveness of P. annua
with D. antarctica, but only for plants grown from Maritime Antarctic seeds. In the
field, endophyte-colonized
seeds from Maritime Antarctica germinated and survived
more frequently than uncolonised seeds, and osmoprotection was higher in seedlings
grown from colonized seed.
MAIN CONCLUSIONS : The findings indicate beneficial effects of seed endophytes on
invasion-related
traits of P. annua, such as survival, germination success and flowering.
Together with vegetative and reproductive traits facilitating the colonization process,
the seed-fungal
endophyte symbiosis can be invoked as an important factor explaining
the invasiveness of P. annua in Maritime Antarctica.
Description
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT :
All materials, raw data, and protocols used in the article are available upon request and without restriction, and all data will be made publicly available in a public repository (Figshare) upon publication. Figshare: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.22182904.
Keywords
Annual bluegrass (Poa annua), Antarctic hairgrass (Deschampsia antarctica), Biological invasion, Cladosporium, King George Island, Maritime Antarctica, Seed fungal endophytes, Symbiosis, SDG-15: Life on land
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-15:Life on land
Citation
Molina-Montenegro, M.A., Ballesteros, G.I., Acuña-Rodríguez, I.S., Pertierra, L.R., Greve, M., Richardson, D.M., Convey, P., Biersma, E.M., Goodall-Copestake, W.P. & Newsham, K.K. (2023). The
“Trojan horse” strategy: Seed fungal endophyte symbiosis
helps to explain the invasion success of the grass, Poa annua,
in Maritime Antarctica. Diversity and Distributions, 29,
1432–1444. https://DOI.org/10.1111/ddi.13768.