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Chapter 8 Plant Nutrient Use

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Belowground resources control GPP, NPP and decomposition ... Most nutrients absorbed by plants are recycled from detritus. 10/21/07. Chap.8. 5 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 8 Plant Nutrient Use


1
Chapter 8Plant Nutrient Use
  • Part II Mechanisms
  • Chapin, Matson, Mooney
  • Principles of Terrestrial Ecosystem Ecology

2
Belowground resources control GPP, NPP and
decompositionWhat controls acquisition of
belowground resources?
3
Nutrient supply is a critical control over NPP
4
Most nutrients absorbed by plants are recycled
from detritus
5
How do nutrients get to roots?
  • 1. Diffusion (most important)
  • 2. Mass flow (sometimes important)
  • 3. Root interception (unimportant)

6
How do nutrients get to roots? 1. Diffusion
  • Driving forces
  • Nutrient uptake
  • Mineralization
  • Consequence
  • Diffusion shell
  • Zone of nutrient depletion around each root
  • Large for mobile ions

7
How do nutrients get to roots? 2. Mass flow
  • Nutrient movement in flowing water
  • Transpirational water
  • Gravitational water after rain
  • Insufficient for growth-limiting nutrients
  • Replenishes diffusion shells

8
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9
How do nutrients get to roots?3. Root
interception
  • Concentration in root higher than soil it
    displaces
  • No-win situation
  • Unimportant

10
What controls nutrient absorption by roots?
11
Nutrient supply is THE major control over
nutrient uptake
12
Root elongation is main way plants can increase
nutrient uptake
  • Increased rootshoot ratio
  • Increased investment in roots
  • Root proliferation in nutrient hot spots
  • Root growth occurs where it does the most good
  • Longer root hairs

13
Mycorrhizae increase soil volume used by plants
  • Trade carbohydrates for nutrients
  • Balanced parasitism
  • Most advantageous for immobile nutrients
  • e.g., phosphate

14
Types of mycorrhizae
  • Ectomycorrhizae
  • Form sheath around root
  • Common in woody plants
  • Arbuscular mycorrhizae
  • Proliferate around root
  • Common in grasses, herbs, and tropical trees

15
Mechanisms of nutrient uptake
  • Active transport most important
  • Requires energy
  • Moves against concentration gradient
  • Abundant nutrients may enter by diffusion or mass
    flow

16
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17
Some plants tap nutrients unavailable to other
plants High-latitude plants absorb amino
acids Prefer ammonium over nitrate Take
whatever they can get
18
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19
N availability in Alaskan boreal forests
20
Nitrogen uptake and use
  • Nitrate must be reduced to ammonium
  • Nitrate reduction often expensive
  • Ammonium must be assimilated
  • Attached to a carbon skeleton
  • Amino acids must be transported through plant
  • Used for protein synthesis

21
Tapping Phosphorus
  • Phosphatase enzymes
  • Cleaves P from SOM
  • Siderophores
  • Solubilize mineral P
  • Chelate-P complex diffuses to root

22
Plants compensate for specific nutrient stresses
23
Strong correlation between nutrient uptake and
production
24
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25
Nutrient uptake correlates with growth
  • Sometimes nutrient uptake drives growth
  • Sometimes growth drives nutrient uptake

26
Nutrient uptake influences rhizosphere
  • Reduces nutrient concentrations
  • Enhances decomposition
  • Changes pH
  • Excretes H when absorb cations

27
Summary
  • Nutrient supply constrains uptake
  • Diffusion is main mechanism of supply
  • Plants adjust uptake rate to meet demands
  • Root growth
  • Uptake capacity
  • Mycorrhizae
  • Enhance supply

28
Nutrient ratios dont vary too much
  • Means availability of growth-limiting nutrient
    governs uptake of all nutrients, BUT
  • Ratios are somewhat variable
  • Similarity of ratios reflects regulation of
    uptake
  • Differences among ratios reflects storage

29
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30
Nutrient use efficiency
31
Nutrient use efficiency (NUE)(two definitions)
  • Physiological approach (plant level)
  • NUE a t
  • a nutrient productivity (photosynthesis/g N)
  • t residence time of nutrient in plant
  • Ecosystem approach (stand-level)
  • NUE g biomass/g nutrient in litter

32
A long residence time is the major adaptation to
low-nutrient Habitats Plants dont increase
their carbon gain per unit nutrient
33
All species are similar in resorption
efficiency No major difference in proportion of
nutrients lost
34
All species are similar in the proportion of
nutrients leached
35
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