McConnaughay K D M, Berntson G M, Bazzaz F A
Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, 02138, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Oecologia. 1993 Jul;94(4):550-557. doi: 10.1007/BF00566971.
Recently, it has been suggested that small pots may reduce or eliminate plant responses to enriched CO atmospheres due to root restriction. While smaller pot volumes provide less physical space available for root growth, they also provide less nutrients. Reduced nutrient availability alone may reduce growth enhancement under elevated CO. To investigate the relative importance of limited physical rooting space separate from and in conjunction with soil nutrients, we grew plants at ambient and double-ambient CO levels in growth containers of varied volume, shape, nutrient concentration, and total nutrient content. Two species (Abutilon theophrasti, a C dicot with a deep tap root andSetaria faberii, a C monocot with a shallow diffuse root system) were selected for their contrasting physiology and root architecture. Shoot demography was determined weekly and biomass was determined after eight and ten weeks of growth. Increasing total nutrients, either by increasing nutrient concentration or by increasing pot size, increased plant growth. Further, increasing pot size while maintaining equal total nutrients per pot resulted in increased total biomass for both species. CO-induced growth and reproductive yield enhancements were greatest in pots with high nutrient concentrations, regardless of total nutrient content or pot size, and were also mediated by the shape of the pot. CO-induced growth and reproductive yield enhancements were unaffected by pot size (growth) or were greater in small pots (reproductive yield), regardless of total nutrient content, contrary to predictions based on earlier studies. These results suggest that several aspects of growth conditions within pots may influence the CO responses of plants; pot size, pot shape, the concentration and total amount of nutrient additions to pots may lead to over-or underestimates of the CO responses of real-world plants.
最近,有人提出,由于根系受限,小花盆可能会减少或消除植物对高浓度二氧化碳环境的反应。虽然较小的花盆体积为根系生长提供的物理空间较少,但它们提供的养分也较少。仅养分供应减少就可能降低高浓度二氧化碳下的生长增强效果。为了研究有限的物理生根空间与土壤养分单独及共同作用的相对重要性,我们在不同体积、形状、养分浓度和总养分含量的生长容器中,在环境二氧化碳水平和两倍环境二氧化碳水平下种植植物。选择了两个物种(苘麻,一种具有深主根的C3双子叶植物和法氏狗尾草,一种具有浅而分散根系的C4单子叶植物),因其生理和根系结构不同。每周测定地上部种群动态,并在生长八周和十周后测定生物量。通过增加养分浓度或增大花盆尺寸来增加总养分,会促进植物生长。此外,在保持每盆总养分相等的情况下增大花盆尺寸,会使两个物种的总生物量增加。无论总养分含量或花盆尺寸如何,高养分浓度花盆中二氧化碳诱导的生长和生殖产量增加最大,并且也受花盆形状的影响。与早期研究的预测相反,无论总养分含量如何,二氧化碳诱导的生长和生殖产量增加不受花盆尺寸(生长)的影响,或者在小花盆中更大(生殖产量)。这些结果表明,花盆内生长条件的几个方面可能会影响植物对二氧化碳的反应;花盆尺寸、花盆形状、添加到花盆中的养分浓度和总量可能会导致对现实世界中植物二氧化碳反应的高估或低估。