Journal
PLANT ECOLOGY
Volume 210, Issue 1, Pages 169-179Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11258-010-9747-4
Keywords
Biological invasion; Ecophysiology; Pacific Northwest; Plant invasiveness; Rubus discolor; Rubus procerus
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Funding
- Center for Invasive Plant Management of Missoula, Montana, USA
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Despite species in the Rubus fruticosus complex (wild blackberry) being among the most invasive plants globally in regions with large annual fluctuations in water availability, little is known about their water relations. We compared water relations of a prominent member of the complex, R. armeniacus (Himalayan blackberry), with species native to the Pacific Northwest of North America (PNW), R. spectabilis (salmonberry) and R. parviflorus (thimbleberry). In eight stands of each species located near Portland, Oregon, USA, we measured mid-day hydraulic resistance (R (plant)), and daily time series of stomatal conductance (g (s)), leaf water potential (I-lf), and environmental conditions at four time periods spanning the 2007 growing season. Although all species maintained I-lf above -0.5 MPa in spring, R. armeniacus maintained less negative I-lf (a parts per thousand yena'1.0 MPa) than the natives in summer, a factor attributable to advantages in both its root and shoot systems. R (plant) of R. armeniacus was a parts per thousand currency sign0.1 MPa mmol(-1) m(2) s for the duration of the study, and approximately 25-50% of R (plant) for the native species in summer. R. armeniacus had higher g (s) compared to the native species throughout the spring and summer, with approximately twice their rates in summer. Our R (plant) and g (s) results show that R. armeniacus has access to more water during PNW summers than congeneric natives, allowing it to maintain high water-use, and potentially helping it achieve higher growth and reproductive rates. Water relations may therefore be a critical component of the competitive and invasive success of R. armeniacus and other R. fruticosus species worldwide.
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