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Do competition and herbivory alter the internal nitrogen dynamics of birch saplings?

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posted on 2013-10-24, 14:12 authored by Jonathan MillettJonathan Millett, P. Millard, A.J. Hester, A.J.S. McDonald
• Deciduous trees recycle nitrogen (N) within their tissues. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that reductions in plant growth, due to competition and herbivory, reduce the sink strength for N during autumn nutrient withdrawal and reduce the storage capacity and hence the amount of N remobilised in the following spring. • We used 15N labelled fertiliser to quantify N uptake, leaf-N withdrawal and remobilisation. Betula pubescens saplings were grown with either Molinia caerulea or Calluna vulgaris, and subjected to simulated browsing damage. • Competition reduced B. pubescens leaf-N withdrawal and remobilisation, with C. vulgaris having a greater effect than M. caerulea. However, simulated browsing had no significant effect on sapling N dynamics. The patterns of leaf-N withdrawal and remobilisation closely followed sapling dry mass. • We conclude that the effect of competition on sapling mass reduces their N storage capacity. This reduces sink-strength for leaf-N withdrawal and the source-strength for remobilised N. The ability of saplings to compensate for browsing damage removed any potential effect of browsing on N dynamics.

History

School

  • Social Sciences

Department

  • Geography and Environment

Citation

MILLETT, J. ... et al, 2005. Do competition and herbivory alter the internal nitrogen dynamics of birch saplings? New Phytologist, 168 (2), pp.413-422.

Publisher

(© The Authors / © New Phytologist Trust)

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Publication date

2005

Notes

The definitive version is available at www.newphytologist.com.

ISSN

0028-646X

Language

  • en