首页> 外文期刊>Frontiers in Plant Science >Effects of Inundation, Nutrient Availability and Plant Species Diversity on Fine Root Mass and Morphology Across a Saltmarsh Flooding Gradient
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Effects of Inundation, Nutrient Availability and Plant Species Diversity on Fine Root Mass and Morphology Across a Saltmarsh Flooding Gradient

机译:盐沼洪水梯度下淹水,养分有效性和植物物种多样性对细根质量和形态的影响

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Saltmarsh plants are exposed to multiple stresses including tidal inundation, salinity, wave action and sediment anoxia, which require specific root system adaptations to secure sufficient resource capture and firm anchorage in a temporary toxic environment. It is well known that many saltmarsh species develop large below-ground biomass (roots and rhizomes) but relations between fine roots, in particular, and the abiotic conditions in salt marshes are widely unknown. We studied fine root mass (<2 mm in diameter), fine root depth distribution and fine root morphology in three typical communities ( Spartina anglica -dominated pioneer zone, Atriplex portulacoides -dominated lower marsh, Elytrigia atherica -dominated upper marsh) across elevational gradients in two tidal salt marshes of the German North Sea coast [a mostly sandy marsh on a barrier island (Spiekeroog), and a silty-clayey marsh on the mainland coast (Westerhever)]. Fine root mass in the 0–40 cm profile ranged between 750 and 2,500 g m~(?2)in all plots with maxima at both sites in the lower marsh with intermediate inundation frequency and highest plant species richness indicating an effect of biodiversity on fine root mass. Fine root mass and, even more, total fine root surface area (maximum 340 m~(2)m~(?2)) were high compared to terrestrial grasslands, and were greater in the nutrient-poorer Spiekeroog marsh. Fine root density showed only a slight or no decrease toward 40 cm depth. We conclude that the standing fine root mass and morphology of these salt marshes is mainly under control of species identity and nutrient availability, but species richness is especially influential. The plants of the pioneer zone and lower marsh possess well adapted fine roots and large standing root masses despite the often water-saturated sediment.
机译:盐沼植物面临多种压力,包括潮汐淹没,盐度,波浪作用和沉积物缺氧,这需要特定的根系适应性,以确保在暂时有毒的环境中充分捕获资源并牢固地锚定。众所周知,许多盐沼物种发展出很大的地下生物量(根和根茎),但尤其是细根之间的关系以及盐沼中的非生物条件广为人知。我们在海拔梯度上研究了三个典型群落(Spartina anglica为主的先驱带,Atriplex portulacoides为主的下沼泽,Elytrigia atherica为主的上沼泽)的细根质量(直径<2 mm),细根深度分布和细根形态。在德国北海沿岸的两个潮汐盐沼中[在屏障岛(Spiekeroog)上主要是沙质沼泽,在大陆海岸(Westerhever)上则是粉质黏土沼泽]。在所有地块中,0–40 cm剖面中的细根质量在750至2500 gm〜(?2)之间,且在下沼泽的两个地点均具有最大值,中等淹没频率和最高植物物种丰富度表明了生物多样性对细根的影响质量与陆地草原相比,细根质量甚至更大,总细根表面积(最大340 m〜(2)m〜(?2))更高,而在营养贫乏的Spiekeroog沼泽中更大。细根密度向40 cm深度显示仅略有下降或没有下降。我们得出的结论是,这些盐沼的优良细根质量和形态主要受物种身份和养分利用率的控制,但物种丰富度尤其重要。尽管沉积物经常被水饱和,但先锋地区和下沼泽的植物具有很好的适应性细根和大量的立根块。

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