MORPHOLOGICAL PLASTICITY AND MINERAL NUTRIENT CAPTURE IN TWO HERBACEOUS SPECIES OF CONTRASTED ECOLOGY
- 30 September 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in New Phytologist
- Vol. 107 (2) , 403-414
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8137.1987.tb00192.x
Abstract
Development plasticity and nitrogen capture were compared in Agrostis stolonifera and Scirpus sylvaticus grown in compartmentalized root growth arenas which allowed simulation of the spatial and temporal patchiness distinguishing the conditions of mineral nutrient supply associated with fertile and infertile soils. Despite the small root system, higher rates of nitrogen capture and dry matter production were achieved by A. stolonifera at both high and low external concentrations of mineral nutrients. This species also showed a marked ability rapidly to adjust partitioning of growth between parts of the root system, thus allowing local proliferations of fine roots into sectors of high mineral nutrient concentration. Under the conditions of the experiment, this form of plasticity was only weakly developed in S. sylvaticus, which instead maintained a large but relatively unresponsive root mass under each experimental treatment. It is concluded that the high plasticity observed in A. stolonifera allows the dynamic exploitation of fertile soil by competing roots. It is predicted that the more stable pattern of root development in S. sylvaticus will confer a selective advantage in environments where mineral nutrients are strongly limiting upon productivity and become available in temporally unpredictable pulses.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reconciling plant strategy theories of Grime and TilmanJournal of Ecology, 2005
- Strategies of resource capture by plants—Evidence for adversity selectionJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1986
- The Mineral Nutrition of Wild PlantsAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1980
- Nutrient Supply and the Growth of the Seminal Root System in BarleyJournal of Experimental Botany, 1978
- SOME FACTORS LIMITING NITRATE UTILIZATION IN ACIDIC AND CALCAREOUS GRASSLANDSNew Phytologist, 1977
- AN ANALYSIS OF COMPETITIVE ABILITY IN THREE PERENNIAL GRASSESNew Phytologist, 1976
- Phosphorus Conservation by Evergreenness of Mountain LaurelOikos, 1976
- COMPARISON OF THE EFFECTS OF A LOCALISED SUPPLY OF PHOSPHATE, NITRATE, AMMONIUM AND POTASSIUM ON THE GROWTH OF THE SEMINAL ROOT SYSTEM, AND THE SHOOT, IN BARLEYNew Phytologist, 1975
- The effect of the nutrient intensity and buffering power of a soil, and the absorbing power, size and root hairs of a root, on nutrient absorption by diffusionPlant and Soil, 1966
- An Ecological Significance of EvergreennessEcology, 1966