thumb|Casuarina equisetifolia litter completely suppresses germination of [[understory plants as shown here despite the relative openness of the canopy and ample rainfall (>120 cm/yr) at the location.]]
thumb|Casuarina equisetifolia litter completely suppresses germination of [[understory plants as shown here despite the relative openness of the canopy and ample rainfall (>120 cm/yr) at the location.]]
Allelopathy is a biological phenomenon by which an organism produces one or more biochemicals that influence the germination, growth, survival, and reproduction of other organisms. These biochemicals are known as allelochemicals and can have beneficial (positive allelopathy) or detrimental (negative allelopathy) effects on the target organisms and the community. Allelopathy is often used narrowly to describe chemically mediated competition between plants; however, it is sometimes defined more broadly as chemically mediated competition between any type of organisms. The original concept developed by Hans Molisch in 1937 seemed focused only on interactions between plants, between microorganisms and between microorganisms and plants. Allelochemicals are a subset of secondary metabolites, which are not directly required for metabolism (i.e. growth, development and reproduction) of the allelopathic organism.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).