Nielsen Reina L, James Jeremy J, Drenovsky Rebecca E
Biology Department, John Carroll University, University Heights, OH, United States.
Sierra Foothills Research and Extension Center, Browns Valley, CA, United States.
Front Plant Sci. 2019 Apr 18;10:505. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2019.00505. eCollection 2019.
Worldwide drylands are threatened by changes in resource availability associated with global environmental change. Functional traits may help predict which species will be most responsive to these alterations in nutrient and water availability. Current functional trait work focuses on tissue construction and nutrient concentrations, but plant performance in low resource environments also may be strongly influenced by traits related to nutrient budgets and allocation. Our overall objective was to compare trait responses in a suite of serpentine and nonserpentine congener pairs from the California chaparral, a biodiverse region facing nutrient deposition and future changes in precipitation. In a common garden greenhouse environment, we grew small plants of and in contrasting soil nutrient and moisture treatments. We measured a suite of traits representing physiological, growth, and mineral nutrient responses to these treatments. Overall, plant growth rate and leaf-level phosphorus use efficiency were greatest in the low water, high nutrient treatment, and lowest in the high water, low nutrient treatment. Variation in growth rate and plasticity among species and treatments was primarily associated with differences in mineral nutrition-based traits as opposed to differences in biomass allocation or specific leaf area. Namely, faster growing species and species with greater plasticity allocated more nitrogen and phosphorous to leaves and demonstrated greater photosynthetic phosphorus use efficiency. Overall, nonserpentine species had greater plasticity and biomass response to resource addition than serpentine species, and congener pairs responded to these resource additions more similarly to each other than species across congener pairs. This study extends our general understanding of how functional traits may influence species responses to environmental change and highlights the need to integrate mineral nutrition-based traits, including allocation of nutrient pools and nutrient use efficiency into this larger trait framework. Ultimately, this insight can help identify, in part, why coexisting species may vary in sensitivity to anthropogenic driven changes in soil resource availability.
全球旱地正受到与全球环境变化相关的资源可利用性变化的威胁。功能性状可能有助于预测哪些物种对养分和水分可利用性的这些变化最为敏感。当前的功能性状研究主要集中在组织构建和养分浓度上,但植物在低资源环境中的表现也可能受到与养分预算和分配相关的性状的强烈影响。我们的总体目标是比较来自加利福尼亚丛林的一组蛇纹岩和非蛇纹岩同属植物对的性状反应,该地区生物多样性丰富,面临养分沉降和未来降水变化。在一个普通花园温室环境中,我们在对比的土壤养分和水分处理条件下种植了[植物名称1]和[植物名称2]的小植株。我们测量了一系列代表对这些处理的生理、生长和矿质养分反应的性状。总体而言,在低水、高养分处理中,植物生长速率和叶片水平的磷利用效率最高,而在高水、低养分处理中最低。物种和处理之间生长速率和可塑性的变化主要与基于矿质营养的性状差异有关,而不是生物量分配或比叶面积的差异。也就是说,生长较快的物种和可塑性较大的物种向叶片分配了更多的氮和磷,并表现出更高的光合磷利用效率。总体而言,非蛇纹岩物种比蛇纹岩物种对资源添加具有更大的可塑性和生物量反应,并且同属植物对之间对这些资源添加的反应比不同同属植物对之间的物种更相似。这项研究扩展了我们对功能性状如何影响物种对环境变化反应的一般理解,并强调了将基于矿质营养的性状,包括养分库的分配和养分利用效率纳入这个更大的性状框架的必要性。最终,这一见解可以部分地帮助确定为什么共存物种对人为驱动的土壤资源可利用性变化的敏感性可能不同。