1. Hemiparasite Phtheirospermum japonicum growth benefits from a second host and inflicts greater host damage with exogenous N supply.
- Author
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Frederica, Clarissa Frances and Irving, Louis John
- Subjects
- *
ALFALFA , *HOST plants , *HOST-parasite relationships , *PARASITISM - Abstract
While parasites are likely to connect to multiple host plants in nature, parasitism dynamics under multiple association conditions remain unclear and are difficult to separate from competitive effects. In this study, a five-compartment split root-box was constructed to allow a single facultative root hemiparasite, Phtheirospermum japonicum , to connect to zero, one or two Medicago sativa hosts while maintaining constant plant number and independently controlling nutrient supply. In the first experiment, we found that P. japonicum derived equal, additive benefits from attachment to a second host irrespective of parasite N status. In the second experiment, parasites were grown at four N levels in either parasitic or control conditions. Attachment caused a constant, absolute increase in parasite mass at all N levels, while host damage increased at higher parasite N levels despite an apparent decrease in host to parasite N transfer. Our findings suggest that host damage caused by P. japonicum may be strengthened by exogenous nitrogen supply to the parasite. Parasites benefit from multiple hosts when competitive effects are controlled. Parasite N supply increased host damage but did not enhance/increase parasitic benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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