Lepoint Gilles, Vangeluwe Denis, Eisinger Michael, Paster Markus, van Treeck Peter, Bouquegneau Jean-Marie, Gobert Sylvie
Centre MARE, Laboratoire d'Océanologie, Institut de Chimie, B6, Université de Liège, 4000 Liège, Belgium.
Mar Pollut Bull. 2004 Mar;48(5-6):465-70. doi: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2003.08.023.
A (15)N tracer study was performed during an experimental transplantation trial of natural Posidonia oceanica cuttings. The experiment was done in situ at 17 m depth in the Revellata Bay (Calvi, NW Corsica, France). Despite high survival rates of transplants (>90%) after one year, the weight and the N content of transplants are significantly lower than those of reference plants. In absence of roots, the transplants are not able to meet their N requirement, because leaf uptake is insufficient to replenish the N lost during the natural leaf decay. This could constitute a major cause of long-term failure for transplantation experiments or natural re-colonisation processes. The increase of the (15)N content in the roots shows that the plant re-allocates the nitrogen of one organ (i.e. leaves, rhizomes) to ensure the growth of another (i.e. roots).