Plant Clonal Integration Mediates the Horizontal Redistribution of Soil Resources, Benefiting Neighboring Plants.

Front Plant Sci

State Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Environmental Change, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of SciencesBeijing, China; Key Laboratory of Hangzhou City for Ecosystem Protection and Restoration, Hangzhou Normal UniversityHangzhou, China.

Published: February 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers studied how plants can share vital resources like water and nitrogen through interconnected networks, specifically looking at a plant called Potentilla anserina.
  • They tested their theories by growing these plants with neighbors in different water conditions and tracked resource movement using isotopes.
  • Results showed that P. anserina not only moved resources to connected plants but also into the surrounding area, boosting the growth of neighboring plants like Artemisia ordosica, highlighting the importance of plant cooperation in ecosystems.

Article Abstract

Resources such as water taken up by plants can be released into soils through hydraulic redistribution and can also be translocated by clonal integration within a plant clonal network. We hypothesized that the resources from one (donor) microsite could be translocated within a clonal network, released into different (recipient) microsites and subsequently used by neighbor plants in the recipient microsite. To test these hypotheses, we conducted two experiments in which connected and disconnected ramet pairs of Potentilla anserina were grown under both homogeneous and heterogeneous water regimes, with seedlings of Artemisia ordosica as neighbors. The isotopes [(15)N] and deuterium were used to trace the translocation of nitrogen and water, respectively, within the clonal network. The water and nitrogen taken up by P. anserina ramets in the donor microsite were translocated into the connected ramets in the recipient microsites. Most notably, portions of the translocated water and nitrogen were released into the recipient microsite and were used by the neighboring A. ordosica, which increased growth of the neighboring A. ordosica significantly. Therefore, our hypotheses were supported, and plant clonal integration mediated the horizontal hydraulic redistribution of resources, thus benefiting neighboring plants. Such a plant clonal integration-mediated resource redistribution in horizontal space may have substantial effects on the interspecific relations and composition of the community and consequently on ecosystem processes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4742616PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2016.00077DOI Listing

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