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Water balance affects foliar and soil nutrients differently.

Authors :
Akana, Palani R.
Bateman, Jesse Bloom
Vitousek, Peter M.
Source :
Oecologia; Aug2022, Vol. 199 Issue 4, p965-977, 13p, 2 Charts, 5 Graphs
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Water balance influences soil development, and consequently plant communities, by driving weathering of soil minerals and leaching of plant nutrients from the soil. Along gradients in water balance, soils exhibit process domains where chemical properties are relatively stable punctuated by pedogenic thresholds where soil chemical properties change rapidly with little additional change in water balance. We ask if plant macronutrient concentrations in leaves also exhibit non-linear trends along water balance gradients, and if so, how these non-linearities relate to those in soils. We analyze foliar nutrient concentrations and foliar N:P ratios from eight species that span a range of growth forms along three water balance gradients (three of the species are found on multiple gradients). The gradients are located on basaltic substrate of different ages and have previously been characterized by studies on soil development. We find that maximum concentrations of foliar macronutrients occur at an intermediate water balance. As with soil nutrients, time mediates the effect of water balance on foliar nutrients, such that plants on older soils attain maximum nutrient concentrations at a lower water balance. On both a young, 20 ky and an old, 4100 ky water balance gradient, foliar nutrients reach peak concentrations at a water balance greater than the threshold for depletion of rock-derived nutrients in surface soils. Our findings suggest that plant acquisition of essential nutrients is imperfectly predicted by overall soil nutrient availability because the regulation of internal nutrient pools by plants makes nutrient pools within leaves partially independent of soil nutrient availability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00298549
Volume :
199
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Oecologia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159003129
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-022-05244-2