Plant adaptive strategies in relation to variable resource availability, soil microbial processes and ecosystem development

Abstract Plants have evolved various adaptive strategies for balancing the benefits and costs of having a high affinity for resources, plasticity of growth allocation and mycorrhizal symbiosis. The relative growth rates of mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal plants were modelled for stable and variable...

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Main Author: Aikio, S. (Sami)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Oulun yliopisto 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.fi/urn:isbn:9514256824
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:9514256824
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spelling ndltd-oulo.fi-oai-oulu.fi-isbn951-42-5682-42017-10-14T04:16:34ZPlant adaptive strategies in relation to variable resource availability, soil microbial processes and ecosystem developmentAikio, S. (Sami)info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess© University of Oulu, 2000info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/pissn/0355-3191info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/eissn/1796-220Xmycorrhizanutrient cyclingphenotypic plasticityprimary succession Abstract Plants have evolved various adaptive strategies for balancing the benefits and costs of having a high affinity for resources, plasticity of growth allocation and mycorrhizal symbiosis. The relative growth rates of mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal plants were modelled for stable and variable nutrient availability. Mycorrhizal plants had higher growth rates at low and non-mycorrhizal plants at high nutrient availability. Variation in nutrient availability reduced the growth rate of mycorrhizal plants due to a high affinity for nutrients. However, mycorrhizal plants may be able to buffer against external fluctuations and therefore experience less environmental variation than non-mycorrhizal plants. Non-mycorrhizal plants may even benefit from variation. The optimal allocation of growth between shoot and roots depends on the availability of energy and nutrients. The optimisation model predicted that the requirement for phenotypic plasticity of shoot/root allocation is greatest in environments with low resource availability. Plants with a high affinity for resources required more plasticity in order to tolerate variation than plants with a low affinity. The model predicted a trade-off between the ability to deplete resources and the ability to tolerate resource fluctuations. Changes in the availability and ratio of resources lead to changes in the structure and composition of vegetation during primary succession. The field study of the forested phases of the land uplift island Hailuoto showed a successional change in the vegetation from the dominance of bryophytes and deciduous dwarf shrubs to dominance by lichens and evergreen dwarf shrubs. The humus layer became thinner and the availability of nutrients declined, while the C/N ratio of soil organic matter increased during succession indicating a decline in the quality of organic matter. The increased soil respiration rate indicates a successional increase in the energetic costs of decomposing organic matter. Nutrients mediate both direct and indirect trophic interactions. Indirect interactions of nutrient cycling are not explicit in continuous time models. A transformation to a discrete time model was shown to make the indirect interactions explicit as transition probabilities and allowed their dynamic contribution to be evaluated with an elasticity analysis. The importance of indirect interactions was greater in tundra than temperate forest and increased with the rate of nutrient cycling. Oulun yliopisto2000-06-05info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionapplication/pdfhttp://urn.fi/urn:isbn:9514256824urn:isbn:9514256824eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic mycorrhiza
nutrient cycling
phenotypic plasticity
primary succession
spellingShingle mycorrhiza
nutrient cycling
phenotypic plasticity
primary succession
Aikio, S. (Sami)
Plant adaptive strategies in relation to variable resource availability, soil microbial processes and ecosystem development
description Abstract Plants have evolved various adaptive strategies for balancing the benefits and costs of having a high affinity for resources, plasticity of growth allocation and mycorrhizal symbiosis. The relative growth rates of mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal plants were modelled for stable and variable nutrient availability. Mycorrhizal plants had higher growth rates at low and non-mycorrhizal plants at high nutrient availability. Variation in nutrient availability reduced the growth rate of mycorrhizal plants due to a high affinity for nutrients. However, mycorrhizal plants may be able to buffer against external fluctuations and therefore experience less environmental variation than non-mycorrhizal plants. Non-mycorrhizal plants may even benefit from variation. The optimal allocation of growth between shoot and roots depends on the availability of energy and nutrients. The optimisation model predicted that the requirement for phenotypic plasticity of shoot/root allocation is greatest in environments with low resource availability. Plants with a high affinity for resources required more plasticity in order to tolerate variation than plants with a low affinity. The model predicted a trade-off between the ability to deplete resources and the ability to tolerate resource fluctuations. Changes in the availability and ratio of resources lead to changes in the structure and composition of vegetation during primary succession. The field study of the forested phases of the land uplift island Hailuoto showed a successional change in the vegetation from the dominance of bryophytes and deciduous dwarf shrubs to dominance by lichens and evergreen dwarf shrubs. The humus layer became thinner and the availability of nutrients declined, while the C/N ratio of soil organic matter increased during succession indicating a decline in the quality of organic matter. The increased soil respiration rate indicates a successional increase in the energetic costs of decomposing organic matter. Nutrients mediate both direct and indirect trophic interactions. Indirect interactions of nutrient cycling are not explicit in continuous time models. A transformation to a discrete time model was shown to make the indirect interactions explicit as transition probabilities and allowed their dynamic contribution to be evaluated with an elasticity analysis. The importance of indirect interactions was greater in tundra than temperate forest and increased with the rate of nutrient cycling.
author Aikio, S. (Sami)
author_facet Aikio, S. (Sami)
author_sort Aikio, S. (Sami)
title Plant adaptive strategies in relation to variable resource availability, soil microbial processes and ecosystem development
title_short Plant adaptive strategies in relation to variable resource availability, soil microbial processes and ecosystem development
title_full Plant adaptive strategies in relation to variable resource availability, soil microbial processes and ecosystem development
title_fullStr Plant adaptive strategies in relation to variable resource availability, soil microbial processes and ecosystem development
title_full_unstemmed Plant adaptive strategies in relation to variable resource availability, soil microbial processes and ecosystem development
title_sort plant adaptive strategies in relation to variable resource availability, soil microbial processes and ecosystem development
publisher Oulun yliopisto
publishDate 2000
url http://urn.fi/urn:isbn:9514256824
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:9514256824
work_keys_str_mv AT aikiossami plantadaptivestrategiesinrelationtovariableresourceavailabilitysoilmicrobialprocessesandecosystemdevelopment
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