Leaf life spans of some conifers of the temperate forests of South America

Interspecific variation in leaf life span has wide-ranging implications for plant species sorting on resource availability gradients, and for ecosystem processes such as nutrient cycling. Very little is known about leaf life spans of evergreen trees in the temperate forests of South America. Leaf li...

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Autor principal: LUSK,CHRISTOPHER H.
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Sociedad de Biología de Chile 2001
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Acceso en línea:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-078X2001000300017
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spelling oai:scielo:S0716-078X20010003000172002-06-17Leaf life spans of some conifers of the temperate forests of South AmericaLUSK,CHRISTOPHER H. Araucaria araucana leaf longevity leaf nitrogen Podocarpus resource gradients specific leaf area Interspecific variation in leaf life span has wide-ranging implications for plant species sorting on resource availability gradients, and for ecosystem processes such as nutrient cycling. Very little is known about leaf life spans of evergreen trees in the temperate forests of South America. Leaf life spans were estimated by static demographic methods, and associated leaf traits measured, for four conifers of this region. It was expected that leaf life span variation would correlate negatively with soil fertility of habitats normally occupied by each species. This prediction was upheld by the data. The mean leaf life span determined for Araucaria araucana (24 years) is among the highest figures reported for any plant species. This extreme leaf longevity was associated with very robust construction (high leaf mass per unit area) and very low nitrogen content. These aspects of the ecology of A. araucana may affect its fitness in two ways. Firstly, slow foliage turnover will reduce its annual nutrient requirements for crown maintenance, a trait that is thought to be crucial for survival on nutrient-poor sites. Secondly, the low decomposability of A. araucana leaf litter is likely to cause nutrient immobilisation, possibly favouring site retention by A. araucana in the face of competition from faster-growing but more nutrient-demanding species. Interspecific variation in leaf life span appeared to be systematically related to variation in leaf mass per unit area (LMA) and leaf nitrogen, in agreement with a large body of evidence that leaf evolution is constrained by a trade-off between trait combinations which optimise carbon gain and growth in resource-rich habitats, and those which favour persistence in chronically adverse environmentsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedad de Biología de ChileRevista chilena de historia natural v.74 n.3 20012001-09-01text/htmlhttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-078X2001000300017en10.4067/S0716-078X2001000300017
institution Scielo Chile
collection Scielo Chile
language English
topic Araucaria araucana
leaf longevity
leaf nitrogen
Podocarpus
resource gradients
specific leaf area
spellingShingle Araucaria araucana
leaf longevity
leaf nitrogen
Podocarpus
resource gradients
specific leaf area
LUSK,CHRISTOPHER H.
Leaf life spans of some conifers of the temperate forests of South America
description Interspecific variation in leaf life span has wide-ranging implications for plant species sorting on resource availability gradients, and for ecosystem processes such as nutrient cycling. Very little is known about leaf life spans of evergreen trees in the temperate forests of South America. Leaf life spans were estimated by static demographic methods, and associated leaf traits measured, for four conifers of this region. It was expected that leaf life span variation would correlate negatively with soil fertility of habitats normally occupied by each species. This prediction was upheld by the data. The mean leaf life span determined for Araucaria araucana (24 years) is among the highest figures reported for any plant species. This extreme leaf longevity was associated with very robust construction (high leaf mass per unit area) and very low nitrogen content. These aspects of the ecology of A. araucana may affect its fitness in two ways. Firstly, slow foliage turnover will reduce its annual nutrient requirements for crown maintenance, a trait that is thought to be crucial for survival on nutrient-poor sites. Secondly, the low decomposability of A. araucana leaf litter is likely to cause nutrient immobilisation, possibly favouring site retention by A. araucana in the face of competition from faster-growing but more nutrient-demanding species. Interspecific variation in leaf life span appeared to be systematically related to variation in leaf mass per unit area (LMA) and leaf nitrogen, in agreement with a large body of evidence that leaf evolution is constrained by a trade-off between trait combinations which optimise carbon gain and growth in resource-rich habitats, and those which favour persistence in chronically adverse environments
author LUSK,CHRISTOPHER H.
author_facet LUSK,CHRISTOPHER H.
author_sort LUSK,CHRISTOPHER H.
title Leaf life spans of some conifers of the temperate forests of South America
title_short Leaf life spans of some conifers of the temperate forests of South America
title_full Leaf life spans of some conifers of the temperate forests of South America
title_fullStr Leaf life spans of some conifers of the temperate forests of South America
title_full_unstemmed Leaf life spans of some conifers of the temperate forests of South America
title_sort leaf life spans of some conifers of the temperate forests of south america
publisher Sociedad de Biología de Chile
publishDate 2001
url http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-078X2001000300017
work_keys_str_mv AT luskchristopherh leaflifespansofsomeconifersofthetemperateforestsofsouthamerica
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