Abstract

Mexican sunflower is native to Mexico and Central America and was introduced into China early last century. Now it has widely naturalized and is exhibiting increasing invasiveness in South China. As this species often dominates bare ground, a habitat characterized by extreme fluctuation in temperature and water, it is reasonable to hypothesize that it has special adaptations to high temperature and water stress. Using laboratory experiments to simulate these stresses, this study investigated the response of Mexican sunflower seed germination to temperature and water stress, and compared these responses with those previously reported for another invasive, bamboo piper, which is confined to relatively cool and moist habitats in Xishuangbanna. As expected, Mexican sunflower seeds exhibited higher tolerance to these stresses than bamboo piper. Germination of Mexican sunflower seeds was highest at 15–30°C, but significant numbers of seeds germinated and formed seedlings at 10°C and 35°C, at which no bamboo piper seeds formed seedlings, indicating a wider temperature range for germination than the latter. Roughly half the seeds survived 240 h continuous heat treatment and up to 15 h daily periodical heat treatment at 40°C, while bamboo piper seeds were mostly killed by these treatments. About 20% of Mexican sunflower but no bamboo piper seeds germinated after heat treatment for 30 min at 80°C. Germination was completely inhibited in bamboo piper seeds at -0.6 mPa, while 20–60% of Mexican sunflower seeds germinated depending on PEG or NaCl as osmoticum. This higher tolerance in Mexican sunflower seeds accords with its stronger invasiveness in this area. This comparison between two plant invaders demonstrates that invasiveness is not an all-or-nothing situation, and that adaptation to local habitats is a critical determinant of successful invasiveness for an alien plant.

Highlights

  • IntroductionGray) in the family Asteraceae is a weed native to Mexico and Central America

  • Water stress conditions restricted seed germination in both species, a germination percentage of 20–60% was achieved by Mexican sunflower at -0.6 mPa (Fig 4) while no germination occurred in bamboo piper at this water potential [8]

  • About 25% of Mexican sunflower seeds germinated in soil as dry as 12.5% moisture content

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Summary

Introduction

Gray) in the family Asteraceae is a weed native to Mexico and Central America. It has been introduced widely into Asia, Africa, PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0141567. America and Australia, as an ornamental plant for its beautiful tall flowers, and as a green manure and erosion-control plant for its fast growth. It has become an aggressive invader in Southeast Asia, South Africa and many Pacific islands [1,2,3,4]. It is abundant in tropical China, including Fujian, Guangdong, Hainan, Guangxi, Yunnan and Taiwan [4]

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