Abstract

Rate of phosphate absorption measured on field‐collected, excised roots of eight species from a tundra site and a taiga forest was more strongly correlated with growth form traits than with type of community. In the taiga forest phosphate absorption rate ranged tenfold among species and was higher in graminoids than in shrubs. In both sites deciduous shrubs tended to have higher rates than evergreens. Phosphate absorption rate was not strongly reduced at low temperature in any species examined and there was a temperature optimum of about 20°C in Eriophorum vaginatum. Phosphate absorption rates were higher in lateral than primary roots, although both root types had substantial respiration rates. At one tundra site, calculations suggest that roots of E. vaginatum require 30–40 d to absorb a quantity of phosphorus equivalent to that required to synthesize the root and another 5–6 d to provide the net phosphorus requirements for the remainder of the plant.

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