Skip to main content
Dryad

Data from: Nematode community responses to range-expanding and native plant communities in original and new range soils

Cite this dataset

Wilschut, Rutger A.; Kostenko, Olga; Koorem, Kadri; van der Putten, Wim H. (2019). Data from: Nematode community responses to range-expanding and native plant communities in original and new range soils [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.t1f10sr

Abstract

Many plant species expand their range to higher latitudes in response to climate change. However, it is poorly understood how biotic interactions in the new range differ from interactions in the original range. Here, in a mesocosm experiment, we analyze nematode community responses in original and new range soils to plant communities with either 1) species native in both the original and new range, 2) range-expanding species related to these natives (related range-expanders), or 3) range-expanders without native congeneric species in the new range (unrelated range-expanders). We hypothesized that nematode community shifts between ranges are strongest for unrelated range-expanders and minimal for plant species that are native in both ranges. As a part of these community shifts, we hypothesized that range-expanders, but not natives, would accumulate fewer root-feeding nematodes in their new range compared to their original range. Analyses of responses of nematodes from both original and new ranges and comparison between range-expanders with and without close relatives have not been made before. Our study reveals that none of the plant communities experienced evident nematode community shifts between the original and new range. However, in soils from the new range, root-feeding nematode communities of natives and related range-expanders were more similar than in soils from the original range, whereas the nematode community of unrelated range-expanders was distinct from the communities of natives and related range-expanders in soils from both ranges. The abundances of root-feeding nematodes were comparable between the original and new range for all plant communities. Unexpectedly, unrelated range-expanders overall accumulated most root-feeding nematodes, whereas related range-expanders accumulated fewest. We conclude that nematode communities associated to native and range-expanding plant species differ between the original and the new range, but that range-expanding plant species do not accumulate fewer root-feeding nematodes in their new than in their original range.

Usage notes

Location

Europe