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  • Osmotic potential  (1)
  • Populus tremuloides Michx.  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Key words Atmospheric CO2 ; C cycle ; N cycle ; Populus tremuloides Michx. ; Rhizodeposition
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  It is uncertain whether elevated atmospheric CO2 will increase C storage in terrestrial ecosystems without concomitant increases in plant access to N. Elevated CO2 may alter microbial activities that regulate soil N availability by changing the amount or composition of organic substrates produced by roots. Our objective was to determine the potential for elevated CO2 to change N availability in an experimental plant-soil system by affecting the acquisition of root-derived C by soil microbes. We grew Populus tremuloides (trembling aspen) cuttings for 2 years under two levels of atmospheric CO2 (36.7 and 71.5 Pa) and at two levels of soil N (210 and 970 µg N g–1). Ambient and twice-ambient CO2 concentrations were applied using open-top chambers, and soil N availability was manipulated by mixing soils differing in organic N content. From June to October of the second growing season, we measured midday rates of soil respiration. In August, we pulse-labeled plants with 14CO2 and measured soil 14CO2 respiration and the 14C contents of plants, soils, and microorganisms after a 6-day chase period. In conjunction with the August radio-labeling and again in October, we used 15N pool dilution techniques to measure in situ rates of gross N mineralization, N immobilization by microbes, and plant N uptake. At both levels of soil N availability, elevated CO2 significantly increased whole-plant and root biomass, and marginally increased whole-plant N capital. Significant increases in soil respiration were closely linked to increases in root biomass under elevated CO2. CO2 enrichment had no significant effect on the allometric distribution of biomass or 14C among plant components, total 14C allocation belowground, or cumulative (6-day) 14CO2 soil respiration. Elevated CO2 significantly increased microbial 14C contents, indicating greater availability of microbial substrates derived from roots. The near doubling of microbial 14C contents at elevated CO2 was a relatively small quantitative change in the belowground C cycle of our experimental system, but represents an ecologically significant effect on the dynamics of microbial growth. Rates of plant N uptake during both 6-day periods in August and October were significantly greater at elevated CO2, and were closely related to fine-root biomass. Gross N mineralization was not affected by elevated CO2. Despite significantly greater rates of N immobilization under elevated CO2, standing pools of microbial N were not affected by elevated CO2, suggesting that N was cycling through microbes more rapidly. Our results contained elements of both positive and negative feedback hypotheses, and may be most relevant to young, aggrading ecosystems, where soil resources are not yet fully exploited by plant roots. If the turnover of microbial N increases, higher rates of N immobilization may not decrease N availability to plants under elevated CO2.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Central Pennsylvania ; Fraxinus ; Osmotic potential ; Quercus ; Tissue elasticity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Seasonal pressure-volume (P-V) analyses were conducted on rehydrated and non-rehydrated leaves of Quercus rubra, Q. ilicifolia, Q. prinus, and Fraxinus americana in central Pennsylvania, U.S.A., to test the hypothesis that rehydration-induced shifts in P-V parameters occur in woody species from a non-arid region, and that the magnitude of these shifts increases with species drought tolerance and drought conditions. The species from a xeric ridge (Q. ilicifolia and Q. prinus) displayed increases of about 0.4–0.6 MPa in the osmotic potentials at full and zero turgor and a concurrent loss of symplastic solutes following 12 h and 24 h rehydration, particularly during a late-season drought. In contrast, the mesic, valley species (Q. rubra and F. americana) did not display significant shifts in osmotic parameters with rehydration at any time. In several instances, the relative water content at zero turgor (RWC0) increased by about 6% (e.g., from 85% to 91%) and the bulk elastic modulus (ε) decreased by about 4.0 MPa following rehydration and correction for the plateau effect; the magnitude of these shifts was greatest in the xeric species. However, when data were not corrected for the plateau effect, RWC0 decreased by about 4% in some of the species/date combinations. Plateaus were also responsible for some of the decrease in ε with rehydration, but not for the shifts in osmotic potentials. The largest increases in osmotic potentials corresponded with decreases in tissue osmotic solute content. Rehydration-induced shifts in P-V parameters were responsible for masking or reducing most of the species and seasonal differences exhibited in nonrehydrated samples.
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