Rr. Boar, TEMPORAL VARIATIONS IN THE NITROGEN-CONTENT OF PHRAGITES-AUSTRALIS (CAV) TRIN EX STEUD FROM A SHALLOW FERTILE LAKE, Aquatic botany, 55(3), 1996, pp. 171-181
Despite large differences in the amounts of nitrogen that accumulated
in shoots, the amounts of nitrogen stored over a 4 year period in the
rhizomes of Phragmites australis from a fertile English lake did not c
hange. Rhizomes sampled in November contained a 4-year mean (+/- SD) o
f 22 +/- 3 g of nitrogen in an annual mean dry weight of 2360 +/- 290
g m(-2) Shoots contained between 8 +/- 1 g m(-2) and 20 +/- 10 g m(-2)
nitrogen in the midsummer of the different years and from 0.2 +/- 0.4
g m(-2) to 18 +/- 7 g m(-2) in November. In the early winters, the ma
ss of nitrogen still contained in standing dead stems was equivalent t
o between 1% and 49% of the combined shoot and rhizome-nitrogen. Thus,
the sometimes large amounts of nitrogen that were potentially availab
le for downward translocation to rhizomes were not reclaimed. This beh
aviour is typical of relatively open nutrient cycles where, over the l
onger-term, net storage of incoming nutrients does not occur.