THE CAUSES OF INHERENTLY SLOW GROWTH IN ALPINE PLANTS - AN ANALYSIS BASED ON THE UNDERLYING CARBON ECONOMIES OF ALPINE AND LOWLAND POA SPECIES

Citation
Ok. Atkin et al., THE CAUSES OF INHERENTLY SLOW GROWTH IN ALPINE PLANTS - AN ANALYSIS BASED ON THE UNDERLYING CARBON ECONOMIES OF ALPINE AND LOWLAND POA SPECIES, Functional ecology, 10(6), 1996, pp. 698-707
Citations number
51
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
02698463
Volume
10
Issue
6
Year of publication
1996
Pages
698 - 707
Database
ISI
SICI code
0269-8463(1996)10:6<698:TCOISG>2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
1. To investigate the underlying causes of the inherently low relative growth rate (RGR) in alpine plants, we compared the carbon economy of six altitudinally contrasting Poa species. These included two alpine (P. fawcettiae and P. costiniana), one subalpine (P. alpina) and three temperate lowland (P. pratensis, P. compressa and P. trivialis)specie s. 2. All species were grown hydroponically under identical controlled conditions. The RGRs of each of the selected species were: P. fawcett iae (111 mg g(-1) day(-1)), P. costiniana (125 mg g(-1) day(-1)), P. a lpina (166 mg g(-1) day(-1)), P. pratensis (179 mg g(-1) day(-1)), P. compressa (188 mg g(-1) day(-1)) and P. trivialis (255 mg g(-1) day(-1 )). 3. The slow growth of the alpines could not be attributed to lower rates of photosynthesis per unit leaf area. Similarly, higher rates o f shoot and root respiration rates per unit dry mass per se could not explain the slower, growth exhibited by the alpine species. The differ ences in RGR were also not owing to differences in whole plant carbon concentration or the proportion of whole plant biomass allocated to th e leaves, stems and roots. 4. The only parameter that did explain the variation in RGR was specific leaf area (SLA, leaf area per leaf dry m ass), with the alpine species exhibiting significantly lower SLAs than the sub-alpine and lowland species. Consequently, the rate of photosy nthesis per unit leaf dry mass was substantially lower in the slow-gro wing alpine species. The alpine species also used a greater proportion of their daily fixed carbon in respiration than did the fast-growing lowland species. 5. We conclude that low SLA is the primary cause of t he inherently low growth rates of the selected alpine Poa species in o ur controlled environment. The possible causes of low RGR of field-gro wn alpine plants are discussed.