Ecophysiological differences among growth stages of Quercus laevis in a sandhill oak community

Plants in the sandhill habitats of the southeast are thought to be limited by soil resources such as water and nutrients. We measured ecophysiological characters related to resource use for several growth stages: Seedling Sprouts (small sprouts from small root collars), Stump Sprouts (small sprouts...

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Main Authors: DONOVAN, Lisa A., MANIATES, Rebecca Pappert
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 1998
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/library_research/79
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spelling sg-smu-ink.library_research-10802016-12-28T08:36:06Z Ecophysiological differences among growth stages of Quercus laevis in a sandhill oak community DONOVAN, Lisa A. MANIATES, Rebecca Pappert Plants in the sandhill habitats of the southeast are thought to be limited by soil resources such as water and nutrients. We measured ecophysiological characters related to resource use for several growth stages: Seedling Sprouts (small sprouts from small root collars), Stump Sprouts (small sprouts from large root collars) and Adults (large reproductively mature trees) of Quercus laevis (turkey oak) in SC. Adults did not differ from Stump Sprouts in water potentials, photosynthesis, stomatal conductance, or leaf nitrogen. In contrast, Seedling Sprouts differed from Stump Sprouts and Adults in June: lower predawn water potentials, lower rates of photosynthesis and stomatal conductance, higher specific leaf area, and lower leaf N concentration. The September growth stages rankings for these characters were generally similar to those in June, but variation within a growth stage was greater and thus Seedling Sprouts were only significantly different from the other two growth stages for leaf nitrogen. The differences between Seedling Sprouts and larger individuals may be due to differential access to soil resources as a function of rooting depth. Soil water availability was high in March, low in June, and higher again in September except at 1.25 m. Soil total N was higher at soil depth of 0-0.1 than 0.1-0.2 m in March, but did not differ between 0.25, 0.50, 0.75, 1.00 and 1.25 m in June. The differences in resource acquisition and resource use should relate to growth and survival of individuals within a population. 1998-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/library_research/79 Research Collection Library eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Nitrogen Photosynthesis Quercus laevis Sandhills Sprouts Turkey oak Water potentials Life Sciences
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Nitrogen
Photosynthesis
Quercus laevis
Sandhills
Sprouts
Turkey oak
Water potentials
Life Sciences
spellingShingle Nitrogen
Photosynthesis
Quercus laevis
Sandhills
Sprouts
Turkey oak
Water potentials
Life Sciences
DONOVAN, Lisa A.
MANIATES, Rebecca Pappert
Ecophysiological differences among growth stages of Quercus laevis in a sandhill oak community
description Plants in the sandhill habitats of the southeast are thought to be limited by soil resources such as water and nutrients. We measured ecophysiological characters related to resource use for several growth stages: Seedling Sprouts (small sprouts from small root collars), Stump Sprouts (small sprouts from large root collars) and Adults (large reproductively mature trees) of Quercus laevis (turkey oak) in SC. Adults did not differ from Stump Sprouts in water potentials, photosynthesis, stomatal conductance, or leaf nitrogen. In contrast, Seedling Sprouts differed from Stump Sprouts and Adults in June: lower predawn water potentials, lower rates of photosynthesis and stomatal conductance, higher specific leaf area, and lower leaf N concentration. The September growth stages rankings for these characters were generally similar to those in June, but variation within a growth stage was greater and thus Seedling Sprouts were only significantly different from the other two growth stages for leaf nitrogen. The differences between Seedling Sprouts and larger individuals may be due to differential access to soil resources as a function of rooting depth. Soil water availability was high in March, low in June, and higher again in September except at 1.25 m. Soil total N was higher at soil depth of 0-0.1 than 0.1-0.2 m in March, but did not differ between 0.25, 0.50, 0.75, 1.00 and 1.25 m in June. The differences in resource acquisition and resource use should relate to growth and survival of individuals within a population.
format text
author DONOVAN, Lisa A.
MANIATES, Rebecca Pappert
author_facet DONOVAN, Lisa A.
MANIATES, Rebecca Pappert
author_sort DONOVAN, Lisa A.
title Ecophysiological differences among growth stages of Quercus laevis in a sandhill oak community
title_short Ecophysiological differences among growth stages of Quercus laevis in a sandhill oak community
title_full Ecophysiological differences among growth stages of Quercus laevis in a sandhill oak community
title_fullStr Ecophysiological differences among growth stages of Quercus laevis in a sandhill oak community
title_full_unstemmed Ecophysiological differences among growth stages of Quercus laevis in a sandhill oak community
title_sort ecophysiological differences among growth stages of quercus laevis in a sandhill oak community
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 1998
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/library_research/79
_version_ 1712301521652154368