Radicle pruning by seed-eating animals helps oak seedlings absorb more soil nutrient
Autor: | Mengyao Ju, Xianfeng Yi, Chao Xue, Minghui Wang |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
Soil nutrients education 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences Plant Roots Quercus Soil Nutrient Dry weight Shoot dry weight Radicle Animals 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences 050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology biology fungi 05 social sciences food and beverages Sciuridae Feeding Behavior biology.organism_classification Horticulture nervous system Seedling Seedlings Animal Science and Zoology Quercus variabilis Pruning |
Zdroj: | Integrative zoology. 16(5) |
ISSN: | 1749-4877 |
Popis: | Although radicle pruning has well been observed in plant-animal interactions, research has not been conducted to determine how radicle pruning by seed-eating animals regulates nutrition mobilization of cotyledonary reserves and absorption of soil nutrients. We used stable nitrogen isotopes to test how acorns of early-germinating oak species (Quercus variabilis, Q. aliena, and Q. mogolica) trade off nutrients in the cotyledons and those in the soil in response to radicle pruning by seed-eating rodents. Radicle pruning by rodents resulted in root branching in the 3 early-germinating oak species. Moreover, radicle pruning increased shoot dry weight and substantially reduced the root-to-shoot ratio of oak species. Corresponding to the decreased dry weight of roots and root-to-shoot ratio, the dry weight of the remnant cotyledons was higher after radicle pruning in the 3 oak species. We provided first evidence that radicle pruning by seed-eating animals improved seedling performance of early-germinating oaks by increasing absorption of nutrients from soil. The results indicate that early-germinating oak seedlings trade off nutrition budget by altering nutrient absorption from soil and reserve mobilization from cotyledons in response to radicle pruning by seed-eating animals. Our study provided new insight into the nutrition allocation mechanism of young seedlings in response to radicle pruning by seed-eating animals, reflecting a mutualistic interaction between early-germinating oak and food-hoarding animals. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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