2023
DOI: 10.15244/pjoes/168421
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Root Exudates of <i>Wedelia trilobata</i> Suppress Soil-Borne Pathogenic Fungi and Increase Its Invasion

Abstract: Invasive species have competitive advantages over neighboring native species and decrease the biodiversity of the local community. The novel weapon hypothesis suggests that invasive plants affect local plants and suppress soil-borne pathogens by exuding allelochemicals to facilitate invasion. Therefore, the following study was designed by focusing on the extracts derived from certain parts of plants, and the impact of the collected root exudates of invasive plants on soil-borne pathogens has been documented, b… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…A final potential mechanism by which exudation may drive positive direct plant-soil feedbacks is through release of antimicrobial compounds that suppress soil pathogens. However, while research shows that some exudates do have antimicrobial properties (Lamichhane et al, 2023;Xiang et al, 2023), to our knowledge there have not been studies demonstrating antimicrobial exudates driving plant-soil feedbacks that increase invasive potential.…”
Section: Positive Direct Plant-soil Feedbacksmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…A final potential mechanism by which exudation may drive positive direct plant-soil feedbacks is through release of antimicrobial compounds that suppress soil pathogens. However, while research shows that some exudates do have antimicrobial properties (Lamichhane et al, 2023;Xiang et al, 2023), to our knowledge there have not been studies demonstrating antimicrobial exudates driving plant-soil feedbacks that increase invasive potential.…”
Section: Positive Direct Plant-soil Feedbacksmentioning
confidence: 94%