Abstract The magnitude of plant–soil feedback (PSF) can depend on the time of conditioning as well as the length of feedback. Understanding the temporal variation in PSF requires insight in the response of both soil characteristics and the plant. We examined how conspecific PSF varies with the length of conditioning and the size of the response plant using Jacobaea vulgaris, a species known to experience negative conspecific PSF. Together with reanalysis of an existing microbial sequence dataset, we tested whether the temporal variation in PSF is due to size‐dependent plant sensitivity to conditioned soil or due to compositional changes in microbial communities of conditioned soil. Further, by reanalysing another existing dataset, we examined temporal dynamics of the relative growth rates (RGR) of J. vulgaris during the feedback phase. Testing varying conditioning lengths, uncovered that J. vulgaris exhibited the strongest negative PSF at 5 weeks of conditioning, after which PSF gradually attenuated. Plant sensitivity to conditioned soil decreased with increasing plant age/size of the response plant. In the feedback phase, the RGR of J. vulgaris was first higher, then lower and at the end similar in ‘away’ soil compared to ‘home’ soil. The dissimilarity in bacterial and fungal communities in ‘home’ and ‘away’ soil significantly decreased during the feedback phase. When J. vulgaris grew in ‘away’ soil, the relative abundance of 10 (out of 80) bacterial OTUs that positively correlated with plant growth decreased over time, while 5 (out of 86) OTUs that negatively correlated with plant growth the relative abundance increased over time. Additionally, only one (out of 10) fungal OTU that negatively associated with plant growth increased over time in ‘away’ soil. Synthesis. Our findings illustrate that PSF varies with the duration of soil conditioning and of the feedback phase. During the feedback phase, changes in PSF can be attributed to both the size‐dependent plant sensitivity to conditioned soil and temporal changes in the microbial community of conditioned soil. This highlights the importance of considering the reconditioning of soil microbial communities by the test plants during the feedback phase for understanding temporal variation in PSF.
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