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  • Fynbos  (4)
  • Springer  (4)
  • Wiley-Blackwell
  • American Meteorological Society (AMS)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Nitrogen isotope discrimination ; Cape floristic region ; Fynbos ; Strandveld ; Acacia
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract This study examines the impacts of woody, N2-fixing invasive Acacia spp. on the patterns of nutrient cycling in two invaded ecosystems of differing nutrient status in the Cape floristic region. Patterns of soil nutrient mineralization were measured by a field incubation method while the significance of the fixation process in altering nutrient cycling was assessed by the δ15N natural abundance technique. The results confirm earlier reports that invasion by woody shrubs results in organic matter and nutrient enrichment of surface soils of both ecosystems. However, patterns of nutrient availability (phosphorus and nitrogen) were not necessarily enhanced. In the more fertile strandveld both phosphorus and nitrogen (significant at P〈0.10) showed trends towards enhanced annual mineralization rates upon invasion, while in the low nutrient fynbos system only phosphorus followed this trend. It is unclear whether this differential response is a consequence of plant- or soil-derived feedbacks on the decomposition processes in each system. The δ15N values of the soils from the invaded sites of both ecosystems indicated a strong influence of the alien species on the soil nitrogen component. However, as with other studies of natural ecosystems, the contribution of nitrogen from fixation could not be readily quantified with the δ15N natural abundance method because of problems in selecting suitable non-N2-fixing reference plants. A technique of disrupting nodule structure and function, by fumigation with O2, to obtain the δ15N value of a non-N2-fixing speciment of the study species was tried and found to overcome some of the problems associated with the lack of suitable reference plants. With this technique it was possible to detect the almost total dependence of A. saligna on N2-fixation in the fynbos soils with their low nitrogen mineralization rates. In the strandveld ecosystem with much higher soil nitrogen release rates A. cyclops was only partly dependent on fixation (about half) for its nitrogen. The nutrient enrichment of both ecosystems and trends towards enhanced rates of nutrient mineralization could have profound implications on the long-term success of alien invader clearing operations and the restoration of the indigenous flora at these sites.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Allocation patterns ; Restionaceae ; Nitrogen ; Dry mass ; Fynbos
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The annual growth pattern of male plants of the endemic, dioecious fynbos species, Thamnochortus punctatus, revealed sequential growth of the various below-and above-ground organs. Root and rhizome development were favoured in the wet winter months while culm elongation occurred in the warmer but drier spring to summer period. The reproductive phase of development followed in the hot dry summer and autumn. The asynchronous pattern of growth is suggested to enable the plant to maximize utilization of scarce resources within the confines of the environmental controls determined by the mediterranean-climate. Maximum root and rhizome activity in the rainy season enabled the plant to absorb and store nitrogen in mature culms for later above ground organ development. As the absorption of nitrogen from senscing material is essential for this pattern of organ development to assist in alleviating nutrient scarcity the high degree of nitrogen reabsorption, 35 to 70% for branches and culms respectively, shows the potential importance of asynchronous organ growth in overcoming nitrogen limitation of plant growth. Comparisons of dry mass and nitrogen allocation patterns indicate that developmental strategies employed by evergreen, perennial plants in climatically and edaphically constrained environments cannot be deduced from biomass allocation patterns alone as they do not appear to reflect strategies evolved to overcome nutrient limitation.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Oecologia 81 (1989), S. 412-417 
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Myrmecochory ; Fynbos ; Regeneration ; Fire ; Nutrient
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Leucospermum conocarpodendron (L.) Buek (Proteaceae) seedlings were excavated several months after a fire in Cape fynbos. Seedlings under burnt parental skeletons had short hypocotyls (mean 25 mm) indicating passive dispersal whereas seedlings in the open were more deeply buried (mean 48 mm) by ants. Soil nutrient concentrations at the site of germination were negatively related to depth of burial and distance from parent. Ant dispersal resulted in seedlings emerging in soils with lower nutrient concentrations than passively dispersed seeds. Tissue analysis supported the soil results with lower P content in seedlings from open (ant dispersed) sites. Seedling survival in the first year of establishment was also lower in open sites, but not significantly so. However seedlings were slightly taller in the open. The results of this study, the first on naturally occurring intraspecific variation in myrmecochory, strongly contradict current explanations for the high incidence of myrmecochory in nutrient poor environments.
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Plant ecology 130 (1997), S. 143-153 
    ISSN: 1573-5052
    Keywords: Community boundaries ; Fynbos ; Nitrogen ; Phosphorus ; Soils
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The relationship between changes in soil nutrient characteristics and fynbos community boundaries was investigated near Cape Agulhas, South Africa. Soil characteristics relating to total nutrient content (pH, total N and total P, organic carbon, and various cations) were assessed at sites along three transects crossing the boundaries between five plant communities. Dynamics of available N and P in soils of three communities were studied in the field over one year, using ion-exchange resins. There was a wide range in the degree of change in soil nutrient content across different community boundaries. The characteristics that varied most were pH, total N, Ca and total P. Differences in available nutrients among soils indicated that the communities in this landscape were associated with a mosaic of N and P availability. It is proposed that spatial variation in soil nutrient availability rather than total soil nutrient contents may be important in explaining landscape-level species distributions and community composition in nutrient-poor mediterranean-climate ecosystems.
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