Soil resource acquisition mechanisms, nutrient concentrations and growth in perennial grasses

Relationships among soil resource acquisition mechanisms and components of shoot tissue production were studied in the late-seral, grazing tolerant and competitive Stipa clarazii Ball and in the earlier-seral, less grazing tolerant and competitive S. tenuis Phil and S. ambigua Speg. History of grazing and/or fire determines abundance of these C3 perennial tussock grasses in temperate, semiarid rangelands of Argentina. We hypothesized lower values for root length density (RLD) and percentage vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (%VAM) colonization on defoliated than on undefoliated plants, and also greater values for RLD and %VAM colonization on defoliated and undefoliated plants of S. clarazii than on those of the other two species, because of its greater competitive ability and defoliation tolerance. Field study was conducted within a 2-year exclosure to domestic herbivory. One group of plants was defoliated once to 5cm stubble height in early spring, while another group was defoliated twice, in early and mid-spring. A third group remained undefoliated (control). Measurements were conducted 6-10 days after each defoliation, and at the end of the growing season. RLD and %VAM colonization were similar on defoliated plants and on undefoliated controls in all three species. Greater regrowth production in S. clarazii was not associated with higher RLD and %VAM colonization in the more competitive species. The positive relationship between RLD and either dry weight production or tissue N and P concentration in these species suggests that their root activity must be maintained after defoliation to rapidly reestablish a photosynthetic canopy and keep resource supply at equilibrium. All perennial grasses showed consistently high %VAM colonization, suggesting they may function as obligate mycotrophs. The negative correlation between %VAM colonization and RLD or soil available P for S. clarazii could represent a mechanism to avoid shifts from mutualism to parasitism in the plant-mycorrhizae relationship.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Saint Pierre,Carolina, Busso,Carlos A, Montenegro,Oscar A, Rodríguez,Gustavo D, Giorgetti,Hugo D, Montani,TomÁs, Bravo,Oscar A
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: ASOCIACIÓN INTERCIENCIA 2004
Online Access:http://ve.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0378-18442004000600005
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