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      Inoculation with a Native Soil Community Advances Succession in a Grassland Restoration

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      Restoration Ecology
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Incorporating the Soil Community into Plant Population Dynamics: The Utility of the Feedback Approach

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            Rooting theories of plant community ecology in microbial interactions.

            Predominant frameworks for understanding plant ecology have an aboveground bias that neglects soil micro-organisms. This is inconsistent with recent work illustrating the importance of soil microbes in terrestrial ecology. Microbial effects have been incorporated into plant community dynamics using ideas of niche modification and plant-soil community feedbacks. Here, we expand and integrate qualitative conceptual models of plant niche and feedback to explore implications of microbial interactions for understanding plant community ecology. At the same time we review the empirical evidence for these processes. We also consider common mycorrhizal networks, and propose that these are best interpreted within the feedback framework. Finally, we apply our integrated model of niche and feedback to understanding plant coexistence, monodominance and invasion ecology. Copyright (c) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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              Soil community feedback and the coexistence of competitors: conceptual frameworks and empirical tests

              A growing body of empirical work suggests that soil organisms can exert a strong role in plant community dynamics and may contribute to the coexistence of plant species. Some of this evidence comes from examining the feedback on plant growth through changes in the composition of the soil community. Host specific changes in soil community composition can generate feedback on plant growth and this feedback can be positive or negative. Previous work has demonstrated that negative soil community feedback can contribute to the coexistence of equivalent competitors. In this paper, I show that negative soil community feedback can also contribute to the coexistence of strong competitors, maintaining plant species that would not coexist in the absence of soil community dynamics. I review the evidence for soil community feedback and find accumulating evidence that soil community feedback can be common, strongly negative, and generated by a variety of complementary soil microbial mechanisms, including host-specific changes in the composition of the rhizosphere bacteria, nematodes, pathogenic fungi, and mycorrhizal fungi. Finally, I suggest topics needing further examination.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Restoration Ecology
                Wiley-Blackwell
                10612971
                March 2012
                March 2012
                : 20
                : 2
                : 218-226
                Article
                10.1111/j.1526-100X.2010.00752.x
                356c1455-8706-47fd-b07d-08a79c23c1cc
                © 2012

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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