Dry matter partitioning and root length/leaf area ratios in herbaceous perennial plants with diverse altitudinal distribution
- 1 December 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 74 (3) , 411-418
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00378938
Abstract
Partitioning patterns in 22 exclusively low and 27 exclusively high altitude perennial herbaceous species were examined in order to test the hypothesis that plants of high altitudes allocate more dry matter to below-ground parts and in particular to storage organs, than typical low altitude plants. Our results raise some doubts about the general validity of this hypothesis. The mean fractions of total dry matter allocated to green leaves (22±2% s.e. at low and 24±2% at high altitude) and special storage organs (28±4% at both altitudes) do not differ significantly among sites. The mean relative portions of total dry matter allocated to above-ground plant parts amount to 57±3% at low and 42±3% at high elevation (P=0.002) and differ less than often assumed. The greater below-ground fraction at high altitude results from reduced stem and proportionally increased fine root compartments. At high altitude specific root length is increased by 50% and mean individual rooting density is tripled. Fine root length per unit leaf area is 4.5 times greater (P<0.001). However, interspecific variation in all these quantities is considerable and species with quite contrasting partitioning patterns coexist at both elevations. This suggests that the success of perennial herbaceous plants at high elevations does not necessarily depend on a large below ground biomass fraction. The increased fine root length at high altitude may substitute for reduced mycorrhizal infection. Figure 1 provides a graphical summary.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Resource Limitation in Plants-An Economic AnalogyAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1985
- GROWTH AND MORPHOGENESIS OF SUN AND SHADE PLANTS III. THE COMBINED EFFECTS OF LIGHT INTENSITY AND NUTRIENT SUPPLYActa Botanica Neerlandica, 1983
- Availability of nitrogen and phosphorus in the nival zone of the AlpsOecologia, 1983
- The Mineral Nutrition of Wild PlantsAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1980
- Fungal associations of roots of dominant and sub-dominant plants in high-alpine vegetation systems with special reference to mycorrhizaOecologia, 1980
- MYCORRHIZAL STATUS OF ERICACEOUS PLANTS IN ALPINE AND SUBALPINE AREASNew Phytologist, 1979
- Growth, Turnover, and Respiration Rates of Roots and Tillers in Tundra GraminoidsPublished by Springer Nature ,1978
- 3. CONTROL OF PLANT GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT BY THE ROOT ENVIRONMENT - ROOT GROWTH AND ITS ENVIRONMENTActa Horticulturae, 1974
- Arctic and Alpine Plant Life CyclesAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1971
- THE ECOLOGY OF ARCTIC AND ALPINE PLANTSBiological Reviews, 1968