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Light, nutrients and the growth of herbaceous forest species
Authors:Marjet Elemans
Institution:Plant Ecology Group, Utrecht University, PO Box 80084, 3508 TB, Utrecht, The Netherlands
Abstract:The herb layer of forests planted on former agricultural land often differs from that of old-growth forest. This study investigates if the expected increased nutrient availability in the shaded conditions of newly planted forests and the plasticity of the species to adjust their biomass allocation to different levels of light and nutrients help to explain these differences in the herb layers of the two forest types. In a greenhouse experiment biomass distribution and production of two species characteristic for the highly shaded forest floor, Circaea lutetiana and Mercurialis perennis, and two species more common in the forest-edge, Aegopodium podagraria and Impatiens parviflora were studied at different levels of light (2%, 8% and 66% of the full light level) and nutrients (30 and 300 kg N ha–1 per year). The main factor affecting allocation and biomass production was light availability. Nutrient supply only had a significant effect at the higher light levels. Species were mainly plastic to changes in light and the two species from the forest floor showed to be more rigid in allocation pattern than the species from the forest-edge. So, although the species from the forest-edge were more plastic, they did not profit from the increased nutrient supply because the main factor affecting biomass distribution and production was light availability.
Keywords:Afforestation  Light  Nutrients  Biomass allocation  Plasticity  Forest herbs  Circaea lutetiana  Mercurialis perennis  Aegopodium podagraria  Impatiens parviflora
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