van Bodegom Peter M, Sorrell Brian K, Oosthoek Annelies, Bakker Chris, Aerts Rien
Vrije Universiteit, Department of Systems Ecology, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Ecology. 2008 Jan;89(1):193-204. doi: 10.1890/07-0390.1.
In wetlands, a distinct zonation of plant species composition occurs along moisture gradients, due to differential flooding tolerance of the species involved. However, "flooding" comprises two important, distinct stressors (soil oxygen demand [SOD] and partial submergence) that affect plant survival and growth. To investigate how these two flooding stressors affect plant performance, we executed a factorial experiment (water depth x SOD) for six plant species of nutrient-rich and nutrient-poor conditions, occurring along a moisture gradient in Dutch dune slacks. Physiological, growth, and biomass responses to changed oxygen availability were quantified for all species. The responses were consistent with field zonation, but the two stressors affected species differently. Increased SOD increased root oxygen deprivation, as indicated by either raised porosity or increased alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) activity in roots of flood-intolerant species (Calamagrostis epigejos and Carex arenaria). While SOD affected root functioning, partial submergence tended more to reduce photosynthesis (as shown both by gas exchange and 13C assimilation), leaf dark respiration, 13C partitioning from shoots to roots, and growth of these species. These processes were especially affected if the root oxygen supply was depleted by a combination of flooding and increased SOD. In contrast, the most flood-tolerant species (Juncus subnodulosus and Typha latifolia) were unaffected by any treatment and maintained high internal oxygen concentrations at the shoot : root junction and low root ADH activity in all treatments. For these species, the internal oxygen transport capacity was well in excess of what was needed to maintain aerobic metabolism across all treatments, although there was some evidence for effects of SOD on their nitrogen partitioning (as indicated by 865N values) and photosynthesis. Two species intermediate in flooding tolerance (Carex nigra and Schoenus nigricans) responded more idiosyncratically, with different parameters responding to different treatments. These results show that partial submergence and soil flooding are two very different stressors to which species respond in different ways, and that their effects on physiology, survival, and growth are interactive. Understanding species zonation with water regimes can be improved by a better appreciation of how these factors affect plant metabolism independently and interactively.
在湿地中,由于不同植物对水淹的耐受性不同,植物物种组成会沿着湿度梯度呈现出明显的带状分布。然而,“水淹”包含两个重要且不同的胁迫因素(土壤需氧量[SOD]和部分淹没),它们会影响植物的存活和生长。为了研究这两个水淹胁迫因素如何影响植物表现,我们对荷兰沙丘低地沿湿度梯度分布的六种生长在富营养和贫营养条件下的植物进行了析因实验(水深×SOD)。对所有物种的生理、生长和生物量对氧气可利用性变化的响应进行了量化。这些响应与野外带状分布一致,但这两个胁迫因素对不同物种的影响有所不同。SOD增加会加剧根系缺氧,这在不耐水淹的物种(拂子茅和砂苔草)根系中表现为孔隙率增加或乙醇脱氢酶(ADH)活性增强。虽然SOD影响根系功能,但部分淹没往往更多地降低光合作用(通过气体交换和13C同化都可表明)、叶片暗呼吸、13C从地上部分向根系的分配以及这些物种的生长。如果水淹和SOD增加共同导致根系氧气供应耗尽,这些过程会受到特别影响。相比之下,最耐水淹的物种(小节灯心草和宽叶香蒲)不受任何处理的影响,在所有处理中茎 - 根交界处都保持较高的内部氧气浓度,根系ADH活性较低。对于这些物种,内部氧气运输能力远远超过维持所有处理下有氧代谢所需的水平,尽管有一些证据表明SOD对它们的氮分配(通过865N值表明)和光合作用有影响。两种水淹耐受性中等的物种(黑苔草和黑藓)的响应更为特殊,不同参数对不同处理有不同反应。这些结果表明,部分淹没和土壤水淹是两个截然不同的胁迫因素,物种对它们的反应方式不同,而且它们对生理、存活和生长所产生的影响是相互作用的。通过更好地理解这些因素如何独立和相互作用地影响植物代谢,可以改进对植物物种与水分状况带状分布的理解。