Abstract

Native plants of Wisconsin seem to show considerable selectivity in the absorption of mineral elements. This was indicated by an unusually high or low concentration of a specific element in a species in comparison with other species growing under generally similar conditions, and by the fact that a species might have an unusually high concentration of one or several elements but an unusually low content of other elements. A capacity for selective uptake of a particular element was in general characteristic of samples of the same species obtained from different sites. The potassium content of some accumulator species was as high as 7.0 per cent when the average concentration in other species from the same sample area was only 2.0 per cent. Manganese seemed to be selectively excluded by some species.Cornus canadensis, for example, collected from a bog of pH 4.0 contained only 149 ppm manganese in comparison with an average concentration of 1061 ppm in other species from the same area.Nemopanthus mucronata showed an unusual capacity for selective zinc accumulation. Samples of this species contained from 300 to 700 ppm zinc while comparison species from the same sites contained less than 50 ppm. Some of the nutritional and ecological implications of the results are discussed.

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