Allelopathy is an interference mechanism by which plants release
chemicals which affect other plants; while
it has often been proposed as a mechanism for influencing plant populations
and communities, its acceptance
by plant ecologists has been limited because of methodological problems
as well as difficulties of relating the
results of bioassays used for testing allelopathy to vegetation patterns
in the field. Here we argue that the
concept of allelopathy is more appropriately applied at the
ecosystem-level, rather than the traditional
population/community level of resolution. Firstly, we consider
the wide ranging effects of secondary
metabolites (widely regarded as allelochemicals) on organisms
and processes which regulate ecosystem
function, including herbivory, decomposition and nutrient
mineralization. It is apparent that plants with
allelopathic potential against other organisms induce net
changes in ecosystem properties, which may in turn
impact upon the plant community in the longer term. We then
illustrate these concepts using two contrasting
examples of how invasive plant species with allelopathic potential
may alter ecosystem properties through
the production of secondary metabolites, i.e. Carduus nutans
(nodding thistle) in New Zealand pastures and
Empetrum hermaphroditum (crowberry) in Swedish boreal forests.
In both cases the production of secondary
metabolites by the invasive species induces important effects
on other organisms and key processes, which
help determine how the ecosystem functions and ultimately the
structure of the plant community. These
examples help demonstrate that the concept of allelopathy is
most effectively applied at the ecosystem-level
of resolution, rather than at the population-level (i.e. plant-plant interference).