Abstract

Young trees 0.03-1.7 m high of three coexisting Betula species were investigated in four sites of varying soil fertility, but all in full daylight, to separate nutrient and plant size controls on leaf dry mass per unit area (MA), light-saturated foliar photosynthetic electron transport rate (J) and the fraction of plant biomass in foliage (F(L)). Because the site effect was generally non-significant in the analyses of variance with foliar nitrogen content per unit dry mass (N(M)) as a covariate, N(M) was used as an explaining variable of leaf structural and physiological characteristics. Average leaf area (S) and dry mass per leaf scaled positively with N(M) and total tree height (H) in all species. Leaf dry mass per unit area also increased with increasing H, but decreased with increasing N(M), whereas the effects were species-specific. Increases in plant size led to a lower and increases in N(M) to a greater FL and total plant foliar area per unit plant biomass (LAR). Thus, the self-shading probably increased with increasing N(M) and decreased with increasing H. Nevertheless, the whole-plant average M(A), as well as M(A) values of topmost fully exposed leaves, correlated with N(M) and H in a similar manner, indicating that scaling of MA with N(M) and H did not necessarily result from the modified degree of within-plant shading. The rate of photosynthetic electron transport per unit dry mass (J(M)) scaled positively with N(M), but decreased with increasing H and M(A). Thus, increases in M(A) with tree height and decreasing nitrogen content not only resulted in a lower plant foliar area (LAR = F(L)/M(A)), but also led to lower physiological activity of unit foliar biomass. The leaf parameters (J(M), N(M) and M(A)) varied threefold, but the whole-plant characteristic FL varied 20-fold and LAR 30-fold, indicating that the biomass allocation was more plastically adjusted to different plant internal nitrogen contents and to tree height than the foliar variables. Our results demonstrate that: (1) tree height and N(M) may independently control foliar structure and physiology, and have an even greater impact on biomass allocation; and (2) the modified within-plant light availabilities alone do not explain the observed patterns. Although there were interspecific differences with respect to the statistical significance of the relationships, all species generally fit common regressions. However, these differences were consistent, and suggested that more competitive species with inherently larger growth rates also more plastically respond to N and H.

Highlights

  • Leaf dry mass per unit area (MA) and the fractional investment of the biomass in foliage (FL) are important plant parameters which are strongly linked to plant growth rates (Evans 1972; Poorter and Remkes, 1990; KoÈrner, 1991; Cornelissen et al, 1996, 1998)

  • Given that the increase in foliar area as the result of improved nutrition inevitably leads to a greater within-plant shading (Ackerly and Bazzaz, 1995), a decrease in MA in plants at higher nutrient availability may be a consequence of lower quantumux densities within these plants

  • The same total foliar area may be formed by a fewer larger leaves or by a larger number of smaller leaves, we suggest that the plant strategy to increase the area of individual leaves with increasing nitrogen availability has distinctive ecological advantages over the strategy to increase leaf number only

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Leaf dry mass per unit area (MA) and the fractional investment of the biomass in foliage (FL) are important plant parameters which are strongly linked to plant growth rates (Evans 1972; Poorter and Remkes, 1990; KoÈrner, 1991; Cornelissen et al, 1996, 1998). Given that the increase in foliar area as the result of improved nutrition inevitably leads to a greater within-plant shading (Ackerly and Bazzaz, 1995), a decrease in MA in plants at higher nutrient availability may be a consequence of lower quantumux densities within these plants. Determine the extent to which leaf nitrogen availability controls MA, foliar photosynthetic characteristics and the fraction of plant biomass in foliage (FL); and (2) understand whether these effects can be ascribed to modi®cations in intra-plant shading and/or differences in plant size. Are closely related shade-intolerant tree species with leaves 5±20 cm[2] in area typically on 0 ́4±2 cm long petioles Both species are pioneering trees, but B. pendula colonizes drier habitats than B. pubescens, which often dominates on wet soils (Atkinson, 1992). Total tree height (H) was employed as a second independent variable to account for plant size related allocation and morphology differences

Study sites
Foliage and soil chemical analyses
Leaf construction cost
Estimations of foliage photosynthetic electron transport rate
The maximum height of the excavated plants was only
Dependent variable*
Changes in leaf size with nitrogen status
Leaf dry mass per unit area in relation to foliar nitrogen
Biomass partitioning in relation to N and tree size
CONCLUS IO N S
Findings
ACKNOWL ED G EM EN T S
Full Text
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