Title: Soil salinity: A neglected factor in plant ecology and weed invasion

Abstract: This paper argues that soil salinity needs to be more broadly acknowledged as a driving factor in plant ecology—not only in the ecology of halophytes—in order to understand and make more accurate predictions for the impact of environmental change on biodiversity and vegetation patterns throughout the semi-arid world. It summarizes recent research on soil salinity and plant distributions in semi-arid environments throughout the world: there is empirical as well as experimental evidence that soil salinity, even at low levels, is an abiotic stress factor that influences vegetation patterns and diversification. Lines of evidence demonstrating salinity's potential influence as a selective agent in East Africa and North America are presented. The paper then synthesizes recent results from spatial ecology, plant and insect systematics and behavioral ecology, focusing on Australia, that support a role for salinity in evolutionary ecology of Acacia. On a shorter time scale, soil salinity may play a role in weed invasion and woody vegetation encroachment in Australia. [E.N. Bui (2013). Soil salinity: A neglected factor in plant ecology and biogeography. Journal of Arid Environments, Volume 92, pp 14–25] [Photo: Field observations in Queensland suggest that the woody weed Parkinsonia aculeata L. appears to colonize saline discharge areas where it forms monostands. Credit: ALA] ${imageDescription} Comment

Keywords: Acacia; Evolutionary ecology; Halophytes; Non-halophytes; Speciation

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Article: WeedsNews4280 (permalink)
Categories: :WeedsNews:ecology, :WeedsNews:research alert, :WeedsNews:weed control
Date: 21 February 2013; 10:33:57 PM AEDT

Author Name: David Low
Author ID: adminDavid