Sclerophylly and Foliar Nutrient Status of Mediterranean-Climate Plant Communities in Southern Australia
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by CSIRO Publishing in Australian Journal of Botany
- Vol. 38 (5) , 459-474
- https://doi.org/10.1071/bt9900459
Abstract
An increase (percentage dry weight) in both lignin and cellulose (with a greater proportion of cellulose than lignin being formed) is associated with a decrease in the concentration of phosphorus (and of other related elements) per unit dry weight in the leaves of sunlit overstorey species, of both sclerophyll and savannah communities in the mediterranean climate of southern Australia. Simultaneously, crude protein decreases. Leaves become increasingly sclerophyllous (with a higher Sclerophyll Index), with lower crude protein (cytoplasm) per unit dry weight; thicker leaves with lower leaf specific area result. The degree of sclerophylly per unit foliar phosphorus content is a little higher in understorey species which are partially shaded by the overstorey canopy.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nitrate reductase activity and chlorophyll content in sun leaves of subtropical Australian closed-forest (rainforest) and open-forest communitiesOecologia, 1990
- Species Richness of Overstorey Strata in Australian Plant Communities ̵2 the Influence of Overstorey Growth RatesAustralian Journal of Botany, 1989
- Soil Phosphate and Its Role in Molding Segments of the Australian Flora and Vegetation, with Special Reference to Xeromorphy and SclerophyllyEcology, 1966
- Further Evidence to Support a Nutritional Interpretation of SclerophyllyAnnals of Botany, 1962
- Soil Phosphate and the Delimitation on Plant Communities in Eastern Australia IIEcology, 1962
- A Nutritional Interpretation of Sclerophylly Based on Differences in the Chemical Composition of Sclerophyllous and Mesophytic LeavesAnnals of Botany, 1961
- Soil Phosphate and the Delimitation of Plant Communities in Eastern AustraliaEcology, 1954
- The Edaphic Factor in Plant Ecology With a Special Note on Soil PhosphatesEcology, 1953