Skógræktarritið - 15.05.2001, Side 158

Skógræktarritið - 15.05.2001, Side 158
SKÓGRÆKT HANDAN SKÓGARMARKA / NSSE ODDVARSKRE Temperature adaptations in growth and carbon balance in relation to nutrient level in seedlings of Betula pubescens from different populations in Scandinavia SAMANTEKT Sagt er frá tilraun þar sem mældir voru vaxtarþættir, köfnunarefnis- og kolvetnainnihald í mismunandi plöntuhlutum og öndun í mismunandi plöntuhlutum á birkiplöntum af þremur mismunandi kvæmum rækt- aðar við mismunandi áburðargjöf og í mismunandi hæð yfir sjávarmáli. í ljós kom að plöntur sem ræktaðar voru við lágt hitastig (meiri hæð) og Iágt N drógu einkum úr vexti sprota og Iaufblaða. Engu að síður var N-innihald í laufblöðum þessara plantna tiltölulega hátt, sérstaklega hjá norðlægasta kvæminu. Við þessar aðstæður eykst sérstök tegund öndunar í laufblöðum sem ekki tengist vexti en við hana sparast N. í rótum er hins vegar venjuleg öndun og þær vaxa. Norðlæg kvæmi virðast vera sérstaklega aðlöguð þessum kringumstæðum enda er mikill vöxtur ofanjarðar ekki heppilegur þegar skortur er á næringu. Abstract Seedlings of three different pop- ulations of white birch {Betula pubescens) were grown in fertil- ized peat at two different nutri- ent levels equivalent to 1 and 10 g N m'2 yr '■ at 50 m and 450 m elevation in southern Norway. The experiment showed a strong accumulation of carbohy- drates in roots of high altitude plants relative to low altitude replicates. In these field-grown plants normal and alternative (cyanide-resistant) respiration was measured on stem and root segments and on excised leaf discs from three Betula pubescens populations. The total respira- tion rates decreased with tem- perature in leaf discs and stem segments, while there was an increase in roots. At low nutrient level there seemed to be a depression of respiration rates in shoots at high temperature, and most of it was cyanide-resistant, i.e. not related to growth. The ecological significance of these findings is that at low tem- peratures increased respiration rates in leaf and stem tissue may lead to reduced growth. At high temperatures, however, in- creased respiration in roots may indicate increased root growth rates that may increase nitrogen absorption rates and lead to increased photosynthetic capaci- ty, compensating partly for car- bohydrate exhaustion. The increased alternative respiration at low nutrient Ievel may be a mechanism to prevent growth at unfavorable growth conditions. Introduction In areas with a summer and a winter season, plants have evolved different methods to sur- vive the unfavourable season, and the selection pressure is determined by abiotic factors rather than by competition (Kallio 1984). Nitrogen availabili- ty is the most important limiting factor for plant growth at high latitudes (Ágren 1985). On cold soils decomposition of organic matter is slow and the concentra- tion of inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus is low. Uptake rates of nitrogen and phosphorus have been shown to be strongly tem- perature-dependent as a result of active uptake in roots (Chapin 1980, Karlsson & Nordell 1987). The energy required for this active uptake is usually supplied through dark respiration or growtfi respiration, which is therefore an important limiting factor for growth at low temperatures. The existence of an alternative respira- tion as an overflow mechanism which is not linked with ATP-pro- duction (Beevers 1970) is further evidence forthis relationship. At 156 SKÓGRÆKTARRITIÐ 2001 I. tbl
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