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(American Journal of Botany. 1998;85:1680-1687.)
© 1998 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Population-level responses to nutrient heterogeneity and density by Abutilon theophrasti (Malvaceae): an experimental neighborhood approach1

Brenda B. Casper2,a and James F. Cahill Jr.3,a

a Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-6018

An experimental approach was used to examine the effects of spatial nutrient heterogeneity and planting density on the sizes of plants within populations of Abutilon theophrasti. Planting locations were generated using random numbers and replicated among populations growing on two different scales of heterogeneity and homogeneous soils. The same quantity of nutrients (dehydrated cow manure) was added to each population, regardless of the spatial nutrient distribution. The higher density was achieved by adding additional planting locations to those present at the lower density. Plant biomass was compared among ten planting locations present in all populations. Plants in seven locations were smaller at the higher density, but the spatial distribution of nutrients affected plant size in only two locations. At the population level, the higher density reduced mean plant biomass and increased both total biomass and the coefficient of variation in biomass, a measure of size inequality. Only when populations on both scales of heterogeneity were together compared with those on homogeneous soils were population-level measurements found to be significantly affected by soil treatment; heterogeneity resulted in decreased total biomass and an increase in the coefficient of variation, apparently due to an increase in the number of small plants in the population. These results, together with the finding that fine root biomass increased in nutrient-enriched patches, suggest that on heterogeneous soils most plants were able to access nutrient patches.

Key Words: Abutilon theophrasti • Malvaceae • neighborhood analysis • nutrient heterogeneity • population density • population structure • root distributions




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F. T. MAESTRE and J. F. REYNOLDS
Nutrient Availability and Atmospheric CO2 Partial Pressure Modulate the Effects of Nutrient Heterogeneity on the Size Structure of Populations in Grassland Species
Ann. Bot., July 1, 2006; 98(1): 227 - 235.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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