Nutrient resorption in shrubs growing by design, and by default in Chihuahuan Desert arroyos

被引:0
|
作者
K. Killingbeck
W. Whitford
机构
[1] University of Rhode Island,Department of Biological Sciences
[2] New Mexico State University,USDA
来源
Oecologia | 2001年 / 128卷
关键词
Arroyo; Desert shrubs; Nutrients; Resorption; Riparian communities;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In the northern stretches of the Chihuahuan Desert, the margins of ephemeral stream channels called arroyos support a unique vegetation dominated by a guild of winter-deciduous shrubs. To explore the dynamics of nutrient conservation in this assemblage of arroyo shrubs, we measured nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) resorption efficiency and proficiency in six species of shrubs growing in arroyos in southern New Mexico. Collectively, these six species were no more efficient or proficient at resorbing N and P from senescing leaves than shrubs growing in other environments. Resorption efficiency averaged 53% and 50% for N and P, respectively, and resorption proficiency averaged 0.80% and 0.06% for N and P, respectively. However, resorption varied significantly between species specifically restricted in their distribution to riparian habitats (obligate riparian species), and those that were not. The two obligate riparian species combined (Brickellia laciniata, Chilopsis linearis) were significantly more efficient and proficient at resorbing N than the non-obligate riparian species combined (Fallugia paradoxa, Flourensia cernua, Prosopis glandulosa, Rhus microphylla). Additionally, both Brickellia and Chilopsis were individually significantly more proficient at resorbing N than any of the other four species. The dichotomy in resorption between obligate riparian species and those that were not may have been the result of the interplay between hydrology, geomorphology, and biology. Because arroyos move in space as the movement of water erodes banks and changes channel location, some plants are found along arroyos only because the arroyos have moved to them. These plants (plants growing by default) may be less well adapted to arroyo margins than obligate riparian species (plants growing by design). Significant differences in resorption between obligate and non-obligate riparian species suggested that evolutionary history and habitat specificity may be added to the list of factors known to influence resorption. Selected life history traits of the six species did not appear to be related to any measure of resorption, but leaf surface area, specific leaf mass, and nutrient concentrations in green leaves were all correlated with resorption efficiency or proficiency in one or more species. The only species capable of symbiotic N fixation, Prosopis glandulosa, retained at least 2.3 times more N in its senesced leaves than any other species. Patterns of resorption in arroyo shrubs strongly indicated that efficiency and proficiency are fundamentally different, complementary measures of resorption.
引用
收藏
页码:351 / 359
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Continent-Scale Landscape Conservation Design for Temperate Grasslands of the Great Plains and Chihuahuan Desert
    Comer, Patrick J.
    Hak, Jon C.
    Kindscher, Kelly
    Muldavin, Esteban
    Singhurst, Jason
    NATURAL AREAS JOURNAL, 2018, 38 (02) : 196 - 211
  • [42] Nutrient additions have direct and indirect effects on biocrust biomass in a long-term Chihuahuan Desert grassland experiment
    Baldarelli, Lauren M.
    Throop, Heather L.
    Collins, Scott L.
    Ward, David
    JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS, 2021, 184
  • [43] Genetic structure and outcrossing rates in Flourensia cernua (Asteraceae) growing at different densities in the South-western Chihuahuan Desert
    Ferrer, MM
    Eguiarte, LE
    Montaña, C
    ANNALS OF BOTANY, 2004, 94 (03) : 419 - 426
  • [44] Responses of nutrient resorption to warming and nitrogen fertilization in contrasting wet and dry years in a desert grassland
    Ren, Haiyan
    Kang, Jing
    Yuan, Zhiyou
    Xu, Zhuwen
    Han, Guodong
    PLANT AND SOIL, 2018, 432 (1-2) : 65 - 73
  • [45] Different responses of foliar nutrient resorption efficiency in two dominant species to grazing in the desert steppe
    Qingge Zhao
    Yuhan Zhang
    Yunbo Wang
    Guodong Han
    Scientific Reports, 14
  • [46] Different responses of foliar nutrient resorption efficiency in two dominant species to grazing in the desert steppe
    Zhao, Qingge
    Zhang, Yuhan
    Wang, Yunbo
    Han, Guodong
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2024, 14 (01)
  • [47] Responses of nutrient resorption to warming and nitrogen fertilization in contrasting wet and dry years in a desert grassland
    Haiyan Ren
    Jing Kang
    Zhiyou Yuan
    Zhuwen Xu
    Guodong Han
    Plant and Soil, 2018, 432 : 65 - 73
  • [48] Nitrogen enrichment alters nutrient resorption and exacerbates phosphorus limitation in the desert shrub Artemisia ordosica
    Zheng, Jing
    She, Weiwei
    Zhang, Yuqing
    Bai, Yuxuan
    Qin, Shugao
    Wu, Bin
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2018, 8 (20): : 9998 - 10007
  • [49] Long-term growing season aridity and grazing seasonality effects on perennial grass biomass in a Chihuahuan Desert rangeland
    Lasche, Sophia N.
    Schroeder, Ryan W. R.
    McIntosh, Matthew M.
    Lucero, Jacob E.
    Spiegal, Sheri A.
    Funk, Micah P.
    Beck, Reldon F.
    Holechek, Jerry L.
    Faist, Akasha M.
    JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS, 2023, 209
  • [50] Growth and water and nitrate uptake patterns of grazed and ungrazed desert shrubs growing over a nitrate contamination plume
    McKeon, C
    Glenn, EP
    Waugh, WJ
    Eastoe, C
    Jordan, F
    Nelson, SG
    JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS, 2006, 64 (01) : 1 - 21