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Bayreuther Institut für Terrestrische Ökosystemforschung
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Niinemets, Ü: Role of foliar nitrogen in light harvesting and shade tolerance of four temperate deciduous woody species, Functional Ecology, 11, 518-531 (1997)
Abstract:
1. Distribution of leaf chlorophyll (Chi), nitrogen and non- structural carbohydrates (NSC, ethanol-soluble sugars and starch) in leaves along a natural light gradient was studied in saplings of four deciduous woody species: Acer platanoides, Padus avium, Populus tremula and Quercus robur (from most shade tolerant to intolerant). 2. Leaf dry mass per area (LMA) increased linearly with increasing relative irradiance (RI) in all species and therefore it may be considered as a species-specific estimate of long-term light conditions. 3. Decreasing irradiance enhanced chlorophyll synthesis, and consistently resulted in highest Chi per leaf dry mass in low-light environments. Chi content per leaf area was correlated negatively with RI in A. platanoides and was independent of RI in three other species. 4. Leaf nitrogen content per leaf area (N-a) increased linearly with LMA in all species, and with RI in all except A. platanoides. 5. The slopes and intercepts of N-a vs LMA relationships were negatively correlated. Moreover, it appeared that the slope decreased and the intercept increased with increasing species shade tolerance. Thus, average nitrogen content per mass (N-m) increases and maximum concentrations of leaf nitrogen shift towards more open habitats with decreasing shade tolerance. Distribution of foliar nitrogen in this way is likely to contribute to greater photosynthetic potentials at higher irradiances in shade-intolerant species. Inversely, more tolerant species have greater concentrations of foliar nitrogen at low irradiance - an investment pattern, which provides resources to enhance the capacity of light harvesting in light-limited conditions. 6. NSC per leaf dry mass was positively related to relative irradiance and the slope of this relationship was highest for shade-intolerant species, which have intrinsically higher photosynthetic capacities.
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