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(American Journal of Botany. 2007;94:25-28.)
© 2007 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Article

Old fronds serve as a vernal carbon source in the wintergreen fern Dryopteris intermedia (Aspleniaceae)1

Jack T. Tessier2 and Matthew P. Bornn

Department of Biology, Central Connecticut State University, 332 Copernicus–1615 Stanley Street, New Britain, Connecticut 06050 USA

ABSTRACT

Maintaining green leaves beyond the growing season has been hypothesized to benefit plants by supplying either a nutrient or a carbon source. Understanding such ecophysiological aspects of plants will help us to appreciate how a species functions in its environment and predict how it might be affected by future changes in that environment. The wintergreen fern species Dryopteris intermedia does not retranslocate nitrogen and phosphorus from old fronds in spring, but photosynthesis does take place in the old fronds during this season. To determine if carbon fixed in the old fronds is translocated to other parts of the plant, we labeled old fronds with 13C via photosynthetic uptake and examined old fronds, new fronds, fine roots, and rhizomes for 13C content 1 day and 1 month after labeling the old fronds. Vernally fixed carbon was translocated to the new fronds but not significantly to the below ground tissues. Old fronds in this species, therefore, serve as a carbon source for vernal growth of new fronds. This is the first study in which a fern was labeled with 13C to track vernally fixed carbon from old fronds to the rest of the plant in a wintergreen species. Future research should examine the precise timing of this carbon movement and examine other species for a similar or contrasting strategy.

Key Words: 13C • Aspleniaceae • Connecticut • photosynthesis • spring • stable isotopes • translocation







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