Ecophysiology of selected tree species in different plant communities at the periphery of the Atlantic Forest of SE-Brazil II. Spatial and ontogenetic dynamics in Andira legalis, a deciduous legume tree

Autor: Geβler, A., Duarte, H. M., Franco, A. C., Lüttge, U., de Mattos, E. A., Nahm, M., Scarano, F. R., Zaluar, H. L. T., Rennenberg, H.
Zdroj: Trees - Structure and Function; September 2005, Vol. 19 Issue: 5 p510-522, 13p
Abstrakt: Abstract Andira legalis Vell. Toledo (Leguminosae, Papilionoideae) is a deciduous tree of the coastal vegetation of Brazil. It was studied in the restinga ecosystems of the Atlantic coast along a moisture gradient of open dry restinga (annual precipitation 800 mm, water table high at 0.9–1.2 m but partially saline), intermediate restinga (annual precipitation 1164 mm, water table low at 2–3 m) and wet restinga (annual precipitation 1000 mm, water table high at 0.5–1 m). In addition, a comparison of the ecophysiological performance was made of A. legalis in the wet restinga and a dune forest (water table low at 2–6 m). Plants of A. legalis at a given site and even within clonal stands show considerable phenological plasticity, where especially timing of leaf shedding and new bud break, leaf expansion and maturation varies between neighbouring individuals and all stages can be observed at the same time. We used analyses of soluble carbohydrate carbon compounds, soluble non-protein nitrogen compounds, stable isotope signatures (δ13C, δ15N) and parameters of fluorescence of chlorophyll a for describing metabolic relations and photosynthetic behaviour and to deduce possible variations in ecophysiological strategies in response to site conditions. The phenological plasticity is described in relation to predominant metabolite levels in leaves, roots, xylem and phloem, but its ecological advantage—perhaps related to staggered resource acquisition and susceptibility to predators—remains an open question. For overall ecophysiological performance among the environmental factors root access to the ground water table appeared to be more essential than significantly different precipitation regimes, as plants in the intermediate restinga appeared to be more stressed than those in the other two open restingas. Shading in the dune forest was also an important environmental constraint.
Databáze: Supplemental Index