کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
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2180316 | 1095128 | 2006 | 12 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
Sowing experiments were used to study seedling recruitment, growth and biomass allocation patterns in the perennial forest herbs Aconitum septentrionale and Actaea spicata in relation to the microbial soil community. Glucose and nutrients were added every second week over a 3-year period to manipulate soil microbial activity and nutrient availability. The glucose was added (400 g glucose m−2 yr−1) to reduce the nutrient availability to the plants by increasing soil microbial demands. A full nutrient solution was used to increase the nutrient availability. The experiments were performed in a deciduous forest and in an open field in South East Norway, and our study is based on a consecutive sampling of whole plants with intact root systems to be able to estimate growth and allocation patterns. Both species recruited best in the forest while their growth in the open field was ca. 100 times larger than in the forest. Shoot:root ratios were surprisingly similar in the forest and the open field sites and were only marginally affected by the glucose and nutrient treatments. However, the shoot:root ratios were characterised by highly significant seasonal variations. This was the case for both species and indicates that the shoot:root ratios were under strong ontogenetic control. Recruitment was negatively affected by glucose additions, in particular in the open field. Growth was significantly and negatively affected by glucose additions in the forest. Nutrient additions gave, as expected, a significant increase in growth. The failure of seedling recruitment and inferior growth following glucose additions support the assumption that the soil microbial community is an important determinant of plant recruitment and growth.
Journal: Flora - Morphology, Distribution, Functional Ecology of Plants - Volume 201, Issue 3, 12 April 2006, Pages 215–226