Abstract

Patterns of mycorrhizal infection, seasonal foliar nutrient concentrations, nutrient allocation to shoots and rhizomes, and nutrient resorption were measured in relation to soil nutrient availability in two species of perennial forest herbs, Geranium maculatum L. and Polygonatum pubescens Pursh., in four forest stands in southern and central Ohio. The percentage of plants with V‐A mycorrhizae and the proportion of root length colonized by VAM structures increased with decreasing nutrient availability in both species. Foliar N and P concentrations in plants from lower fertility sites were as high, or higher, than those in plants from higher fertility sites; as a result, tissue nutrient enrichment ratios (foliar concentration/soil available concentration) increased with decreasing fertility. Proportional resorption of N and P generally decreased with decreasing nutrient availability, a pattern inconsistent with those exhibited by woody plants in these forest stands. We hypothesize that the inverse relationship between nutrient uptake efficiency (via mycorrhizae) and nutrient use efficiency (resorption) exhibited by these forest understory herbs, but not by trees or herbs from high‐light environments, may be related to low‐light limitation of energy reserves in the forest understory.

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