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1.
BMC Plant Biol ; 10: 23, 2010 Feb 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20141632

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Cattail (Typha domingensis) has been spreading in phosphorus (P) enriched areas of the oligotrophic Florida Everglades at the expense of sawgrass (Cladium mariscus spp. jamaicense). Abundant evidence in the literature explains how the opportunistic features of Typha might lead to a complete dominance in P-enriched areas. Less clear is how Typha can grow and acquire P at extremely low P levels, which prevail in the unimpacted areas of the Everglades. RESULTS: Apparent P uptake kinetics were measured for intact plants of Cladium and Typha acclimated to low and high P at two levels of oxygen in hydroponic culture. The saturated rate of P uptake was higher in Typha than in Cladium and higher in low-P acclimated plants than in high-P acclimated plants. The affinity for P uptake was two-fold higher in Typha than in Cladium, and two- to three-fold higher for low-P acclimated plants compared to high-P acclimated plants. As Cladium had a greater proportion of its biomass allocated to roots, the overall uptake capacity of the two species at high P did not differ. At low P availability, Typha increased biomass allocation to roots more than Cladium. Both species also adjusted their P uptake kinetics, but Typha more so than Cladium. The adjustment of the P uptake system and increased biomass allocation to roots resulted in a five-fold higher uptake per plant for Cladium and a ten-fold higher uptake for Typha. CONCLUSIONS: Both Cladium and Typha adjust P uptake kinetics in relation to plant demand when P availability is high. When P concentrations are low, however, Typha adjusts P uptake kinetics and also increases allocation to roots more so than Cladium, thereby improving both efficiency and capacity of P uptake. Cladium has less need to adjust P uptake kinetics because it is already efficient at acquiring P from peat soils (e.g., through secretion of phosphatases, symbiosis with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, nutrient conservation growth traits). Thus, although Cladium and Typha have qualitatively similar strategies to improve P-uptake efficiency and capacity under low P-conditions, Typha shows a quantitatively greater response, possibly due to a lesser expression of these mechanisms than Cladium. This difference between the two species helps to explain why an opportunistic species such as Typha is able to grow side by side with Cladium in the P-deficient Everglades.


Assuntos
Cyperaceae/metabolismo , Ecossistema , Fósforo/metabolismo , Typhaceae/metabolismo , Cyperaceae/anatomia & histologia , Florida , Cinética , Nitrogênio/metabolismo , Typhaceae/anatomia & histologia
2.
Ann Bot ; 105(1): 175-84, 2010 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19748907

RESUMO

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In the Florida Everglades, the expansion of cattail (Typha domingensis) into areas once dominated by sawgrass (Cladium jamaicense) has been attributed to altered hydrology and phosphorus (P) enrichment. The objective of this study was to quantify the interactive effects of P availability and soil redox potential (Eh) on the growth and nutrient responses of Typha, which may help to explain its expansion. METHODS: The study examined the growth and nutrient responses of Typha to the interactive effects of P availability (10, 80 and 500 microg P L(-1)) and Eh level (-150, +150 and +600 mV). Plants were grown hydroponically in a factorial experiment using titanium (Ti(3+)) citrate as a redox buffer. KEY RESULTS: Relative growth rate, elongation, root-supported tissue/root ratio, leaf length, lateral root length and biomass, as well as tissue nutrient concentrations, were all adversely affected by low Eh conditions. P availability compensated for the negative effect of low Eh for all these variables except that low P stimulated root length and nutrient use efficiency. The most growth-promoting treatment combination was 500 microg P L(-1)/ + 600 mV. CONCLUSIONS: These results, plus previous data on Cladium responses to P/Eh combinations, document that high P availability and low Eh should benefit Typha more than Cladium as the growth and tissue nutrients of the former species responded more to excess P, even under highly reduced conditions. Therefore, the interactive effects of P enrichment and Eh appear to be linked to the expansion of Typha in the Everglades Water Conservation Area 2A, where both low Eh and enhanced phosphate availability have co-occurred during recent decades.


Assuntos
Fosfatos/metabolismo , Typhaceae/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Typhaceae/metabolismo , Biomassa , Nitrogênio/metabolismo , Oxirredução , Fósforo/metabolismo , Solo
3.
Am J Bot ; 92(9): 1457-66, 2005 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21646163

RESUMO

Phosphorus (P) availability limits plant growth in many ecosystems. The ability of plants to explore for soil P is often impaired by nonresource stressors. Understanding the effects of these stressors on P acquisition in oligotrophic environments is critical in predicting species dominance. Growth and nutrient responses of Eleocharis cellulosa to redox intensity and phosphate level were evaluated under three redox potentials (Eh) and three phosphate (PO(4)) levels (P). Although low Eh (-150 mV) decreased root length at low P, Eh did not affect shoot height, relative growth rate (RGR), shoot elongation, photosynthesis, or biomass of E. cellulosa. Low PO(4) (10 µg P ·â€ŠL(-1)) strongly inhibited growth. Shoot height, RGR, elongation, photosynthesis, and biomass were lower at 10 µg P ·â€ŠL(-1) than at 80 or 500 µg P ·â€ŠL(-1). None of the growth variables, except the ratio of root-supported biomass to root biomass, significantly differed between the 80 and 500 µg P ·â€ŠL(-1) treatments. At low P, plants allocated relatively more biomass to roots than to shoots, compared to the medium and high P levels. Eleocharis cellulosa is well adapted to flooded conditions that lower soil Eh, and elevated PO(4) levels further promote its growth potential.

4.
Am J Bot ; 90(5): 736-48, 2003 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21659170

RESUMO

Expansion of Typha domingensis into areas previously dominated by Cladium jamaicense in the Florida Everglades has been linked to anthropogenic phosphorus (P) enrichment and increased hydroperiod. The principal stress factor for plants in flooded soils is biochemical reduction, the intensity of which is measured as redox potential (Eh). The objective of this study was to assess the growth response of C. jamaicense to Eh (-150, +150, and +600 mV) and P availability (10, 80, and 500 µg P/L). Plants were grown hydroponically in a factorial experiment using titanium (Ti(3+)) citrate as an Eh buffer. Treatment effects on growth, biomass partitioning, and tissue nutrients were recorded. Growth approximately doubled in response to a 50-fold increase in P availability. Low redox significantly reduced growth and tissue P concentration. While plant P concentrations increased 20-fold between the 10 and 500 µg P/L treatments, P concentrations were 50-100% higher at +600 mV than at -150 mV within each phosphate level. At high Eh, C. jamaicense appears well adapted to low nutrient environments because of its low P requirement and high retention of acquired P. However, at low Eh the ability to acquire or conserve acquired P decreases and as a consequence, higher phosphate levels are required to sustain growth. Findings of this study indicate that young C. jamaicense exhibits low tolerance to strongly reducing conditions when phosphate is scarce.

5.
J Exp Bot ; 53(379): 2441-50, 2002 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12432036

RESUMO

The NH(4)(+) and NO(3)(-) uptake kinetics by Typha latifolia L. were studied after prolonged hydroponics growth at constant pH 3.5, 5.0, 6.5 or 7.0 and with NH(4)(+) or NO(3)(-) as the sole N-source. In addition, the effects of pH and N source on H(+) extrusion and adenine nucleotide content were examined. Typha latifolia was able to grow with both N sources at near neutral pH levels, but the plants had higher relative growth rates, higher tissue concentrations of the major nutrients, higher contents of adenine nucleotides, and higher affinity for uptake of inorganic nitrogen when grown on NH(4)(+). Growth almost completely stopped at pH 3.5, irrespective of N source, probably as a consequence of pH effects on plasma membrane integrity and H(+) influx into the root cells. Tissue concentrations of the major nutrients and adenine nucleotides were severely reduced at low pH, and the uptake capacity for inorganic nitrogen was low, and more so for NO(3)(-)-fed than for NH(4)(+)-fed plants. The maximum uptake rate, V(max), was highest for NH(4)(+) at pH 6.5 (30.9 micro mol h(-1) g(-1) root dry weight) and for NO(3)(-) at pH 5.0 (31.7 micro mol h(-1) g(-1) root dry weight), and less than 10% of these values at pH 3.5. The affinity for uptake as estimated by the half saturation constant, K((1/2)), was lowest at low pH for NH(4)(+) and at high pH for NO(3)(-). The changes in V(max) and K((1/2)) were thus consistent with the theory of increasing competition between cations and H(+) at low pH and between anions and OH(-) at high pH. C(min) was independent of pH, but slightly higher for NO(3)(-) than for NH(4)(+) (C(min)(NH(4)(+)) approximately 0.8 mmol m(-3); C(min)(NO(3)(-)) approximately 2.8 mmol m(-3)). The growth inhibition at low pH was probably due to a reduced nutrient uptake and a consequential limitation of growth by nutrient stress. Typha latifolia seems to be well adapted to growth in wetland soils where NH(4)(+) is the prevailing nitrogen compound, but very low pH levels around the roots are very stressful for the plant. The common occurrence of T. latifolia in very acidic areas is probably only possible because of the plant's ability to modify pH-conditions in the rhizosphere.


Assuntos
Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Nitratos/metabolismo , Raízes de Plantas/metabolismo , Compostos de Amônio Quaternário/metabolismo , Typhaceae/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Typhaceae/metabolismo , Cinética , Prótons
6.
New Phytol ; 108(3): 345-355, 1988 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33873930

RESUMO

Field measurements of canopy reflectance of wetland vegetation in the blue (450 ran), green (548 nm), red (655 nm) and NIR (805 nm) wavebands were correlated with plant biomass variables. Negative relationships, asymptotic in nature, were observed between visible wavebands, canopy reflectance and total live biomass as well as green biomass, with correlation coefficients r between -0·52 and -0·93. Curvilinear relations were observed between NIR canopy reflectance and total live biomass as well as green biomass, with r between 0·39 and 0·88. Different normalization indices (NIR blue-1 , NIR red-1 , VI, PI and NIRlbio ) were tested and positive relations between these indices and total live biomass and green biomass were observed, with r between 0·69 and 0·96. Inverse relations of an asymptotic nature were observed between dead biomass as a percentage of total biomass and of green biomass, with r between 0·90 and 0·91. A model discriminating live and dead above-ground biomass was developed to improve correlations between canopy reflectance and biomass variables. The model nearly doubled the correlation coefficient between reflectance and green biomass for a canopy containing large amounts of interfering dead biomass, but did not change this correlation for a canopy containing small amounts of dead biomass.

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