| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9620495 | Forest Ecology and Management | 2005 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
As seedling establishment and early growth are key life-stages governing tree distribution, we experimentally evaluated the influence of seedbed light environment and substrate on the success and early growth of these species. Under similar environments, first-year jack pine seedlings allocated relatively more biomass to roots and pitch pine more to foliage. This might provide pitch pine with an adaptive advantage when soil moisture was not limiting and an advantage to jack pine if substantial moisture stress occurred. Complex ontogenetic shifts in these allocation patterns occurred over second and third years of growth, which resulted in an equalization of interspecific differences in shoot-root ratios by the end of the third growing season. Night temperatures of 4-5 °C above ambient reduced growth of jack pine seedlings, while that of pitch pine was unaffected. However, foliar respiration and respiratory response to temperature were not significantly different between species and did not explain observed differences in temperature response.
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Authors
Michael E. Day, Jessica L. Schedlbauer, William H. Livingston, Michael S. Greenwood, Alan S. White, John C. Brissette,
