Plant size‐dependent influence of foliar fungal pathogens promotes diversity through allometric growth

Author:

Xiao Yao12ORCID,Liu Xiang2ORCID,Song Zhiping1ORCID,Lu Yawen1ORCID,Zhang Li3,Huang Mengjiao1,Cheng Yikang1,Chen Shiliang1,Zhao Yimin4,Zhang Zhenhua5,Zhou Shurong4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Biodiversity Science and Ecological Engineering, Coastal Ecosystems Research Station of the Yangtze River Estuary, Institute of Biodiversity Science, School of Life Sciences Fudan University 2005 Songhu Road Shanghai 200438 China

2. State Key Laboratory of Herbage Improvement and Grassland Agro‐Ecosystems, College of Ecology Lanzhou University Lanzhou 730000 China

3. Co‐Innovation Center for Sustainable Forestry in Southern China, Bamboo Research Institute Nanjing Forestry University 159 Longpan Road Nanjing 210037 China

4. Key Laboratory of Genetics and Germplasm Innovation of Tropical Special Forest Trees and Ornamental Plants, Ministry of Education, College of Forestry Hainan University Haikou 570228 China

5. Qinghai Haibei National Field Research Station of Alpine Grassland Ecosystem, Northwest Institute of Plateau Biology Chinese Academy of Sciences Xining 810008 China

Abstract

Summary The effect of pathogens on host diversity has attracted much attention in recent years, yet how the influence of pathogens on individual plants scales up to affect community‐level host diversity remains unclear. Here, we assessed the effects of foliar fungal pathogens on plant growth and species richness using allometric growth theory in population‐level and community‐level foliar fungal pathogen exclusion experiments. We calculated growth scaling exponents of 24 species to reveal the intraspecific size‐dependent effects of foliar fungal pathogens on plant growth. We also calculated the intercepts to infer the growth rates of relatively larger conspecific individuals. We found that foliar fungal pathogens inhibited the growth of small conspecific individuals more than large individuals, resulting in a positive allometric growth. After foliar fungal pathogen exclusion, species‐specific growth scaling exponents and intercepts decreased, but became positively related to species' relative abundance, providing a growth advantage for individuals of abundant species with a higher growth scaling exponent and intercept compared with rare species, and thus reduced species diversity. By adopting allometric growth theory, we elucidate the size‐dependent mechanisms through which pathogens regulate species diversity and provide a powerful framework to incorporate antagonistic size‐dependent processes in understanding species coexistence.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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