Eu. Kurczynska et al., INFLUENCE OF OZONE AND SOIL-NITROGEN CONTENT ON THE STEM ANATOMY OF NORWAY SPRUCE SAPLINGS GROWN IN OPEN-TOP CHAMBERS, Environmental and experimental botany, 40(2), 1998, pp. 113-121
Four-year-old Norway spruce saplings (Picea abies) were exposed to dif
ferent concentrations of ozone in open-top chambers for 22 weeks. The
treatments were charcoal filtered air (CF), non-filtered ambient air (
NF) and two elevated ozone treatments: non-filtered air with O-3, adde
d at 25 nl l(-1) (NF25) and at 50 nl l(-1) (NF50). In each chamber, ha
lf of the investigated saplings were grown on nitrogen-poor soil (17 m
g N kg(-1)) and half on nitrogen-enriched soil (34 mg N kg(-1)). Chang
es in the anatomy of the stem, the growth parameters, and nitrogen con
centration in needles and stem were followed over one growing season.
In saplings grown on nitrogen-enriched soil the number of tracheids an
d the number of latewood tracheids decreased, but diameter of latewood
tracheids increased with increasing ozone concentration in comparison
to ambient level of ozone. In the fumigated saplings grown on nitroge
n-poor soil, the number of sieve cells and diameter of latewood trache
ids decreased with increasing ozone concentration in comparison to amb
ient level of ozone. Ozone increased the thickness of sieve cell walls
independent of the nitrogen level in the soil. Needle length was the
only growth parameter that was very little reduced after one growing s
eason of combined nitrogen-enriched soil and fumigation with high ozon
e concentrations. Foliar and stem nitrogen concentrations did not resp
ond significantly to increased ozone levels. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science
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