RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN NET PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND NITROGEN IN SCOTS PINE - SEASONAL-VARIATION IN SEEDLINGS AND SHOOTS

Citation
Em. Vapaavuori et al., RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN NET PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND NITROGEN IN SCOTS PINE - SEASONAL-VARIATION IN SEEDLINGS AND SHOOTS, Plant and soil, 169, 1995, pp. 263-270
Citations number
17
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture Soil Science","Plant Sciences",Agriculture
Journal title
ISSN journal
0032079X
Volume
169
Year of publication
1995
Pages
263 - 270
Database
ISI
SICI code
0032-079X(1995)169:<263:RBNPAN>2.0.ZU;2-9
Abstract
The relationship between light saturated net photosynthesis (A(max)) a nd nitrogen concentration (N) was studied in needles of both Scots pin e seedlings, grown at three relative growth rates (2, 6 and 8 %) contr olled by nutrient addition rate, and Scots pine shoots collected from four sites with different fertility. In the seedlings, A(max) was meas ured on 14 different dates starting at the beginning of the second gro wing season and ending when growth of the new shoot and the secondary needles had finished. In shoots from the natural stands A(max) of the previous-year shoots was measured on 6 dates throughout the growing se ason. Both in seedlings and shoots, the correlation between A(max) and N was poor, when data from all sampling dates were taken together. Ho wever, A(max) was correlated with N in most instances when the age of the needles was considered and the data were examined either at weekly intervals (seedlings) or separately for each sampling date (shoots). The slope of the A(max) vs N relationship varied greatly between sampl ing dates. In the seedlings the correlation between A(max) and N was s trongest by the time when the new needles were developing. In the shoo ts the correlation was significant from mid June until mid August, whi le no correlation was found in the beginning and at the end of the gro wing season. Our data indicate that in pine needles the photosynthesis -nitrogen relationship is more complex than in broadleaved species. Co ntrary to the broadleaved species, where the correlation is independen t of sampling time, in this conifer the time of the year affects the c orrelation and there are phases during the growing season when the cor relation is poor or nonexistent.