Relationships between functional traits and inorganic nitrogen acquisition among eight contrasting European grass species
leaf traits
0106 biological sciences
570
resource-use strategy
580 Plants (Botany)
uptake rate
Environment
Poaceae
Plant Roots
01 natural sciences
root nitrogen uptake
N-15 labelling
Species Specificity
nitrate
[SDV.EE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology
Ammonium Compounds
580
[SDV.EE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology, environment
2. Zero hunger
plant functional traits
Nitrates
grassland ecology
15. Life on land
United Kingdom
Plant Leaves
root traits
grasses
Austria
affinity
France
environment
Ammonium
DOI:
10.1093/aob/mcu233
Publication Date:
2014-12-04T02:52:30Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
Leaf functional traits have been used as a basis to categoize plants across a range of resource-use specialization, from those that conserve available resources to those that exploit them. However, the extent to which the leaf functional traits used to define the resource-use strategies are related to root traits and are good indicators of the ability of the roots to take up nitrogen (N) are poorly known. This is an important question because interspecific differences in N uptake have been proposed as one mechanism by which species' coexistence may be determined. This study therefore investigated the relationships between functional traits and N uptake ability for grass species across a range of conservative to exploitative resource-use strategies.Root uptake of [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text], and leaf and root functional traits were measured for eight grass species sampled at three grassland sites across Europe, in France, Austria and the UK. Species were grown in hydroponics to determine functional traits and kinetic uptake parameters (Imax and Km) under standardized conditions.Species with high specific leaf area (SLA) and shoot N content, and low leaf and root dry matter content (LDMC and RDMC, respectively), which are traits associated with the exploitative syndrome, had higher uptake and affinity for both N forms. No trade-off was observed in uptake between the two forms of N, and all species expressed a higher preference for [Formula: see text].The results support the use of leaf traits, and especially SLA and LDMC, as indicators of the N uptake ability across a broad range of grass species. The difficulties associated with assessing root properties are also highlighted, as root traits were only weakly correlated with leaf traits, and only RDMC and, to a lesser extent, root N content were related to leaf traits.
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