Phosphorus availability and the growth, mineral composition and nutritive value of ephemeral forbs and associated perennials from the Pilbara, Western Australia

Citation
M. Islam et al., Phosphorus availability and the growth, mineral composition and nutritive value of ephemeral forbs and associated perennials from the Pilbara, Western Australia, AUST J EX A, 39(2), 1999, pp. 149-159
Citations number
56
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture/Agronomy
Journal title
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL AGRICULTURE
ISSN journal
08161089 → ACNP
Volume
39
Issue
2
Year of publication
1999
Pages
149 - 159
Database
ISI
SICI code
0816-1089(1999)39:2<149:PAATGM>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
The effect of phosphorus fertiliser on plant growth and the quality of leaf tissues for herbivores were investigated in field and glasshouse experimen ts. In the field, the relative abundance of ephemeral forb species was stro ngly affected by the seasonal variation in rainfall. In winter, C-3 ephemer al forbs were abundant, whilst in summer, C-4 ephemeral grasses dominated. During the dry months, growth of all species was poor. After rain, grasses to which phosphorus had been added increased growth significantly. Nutrient concentrations in ephemeral forbs were significantly greater than those in perennial or ephemeral grasses. Phosphorus concentrations were low in perennial and ephemeral grasses and declined during the dry months. The nitrogen:phosphorus ratio of ephemeral forbs and perennial shrubs suggeste d a deficiency of phosphorus, whilst that of ephemeral grasses suggested a deficiency of nitrogen. A glasshouse experiment investigated the response to phosphorus of 2 common and abundant ephemeral forbs - Ptilotus macrocephalus which responded to a ll treatments up to a maximum rate of 200 kg P/ha, and Ptilotus exaltatus w hich increased in growth up to a maximum rate of 100 kg P/ha. In both speci es, the concentration of phosphorus increased significantly with phosphorus supply, while that of nitrogen did not vary significantly among phosphorus treatments. Generalisations about growth and nitrogen and phosphorus nutrition of nativ e species based on more mesic plant communities are not readily applied in the arid and chronically phosphorus-poor Pilbara environment. Instead, plan t life-cycle and life form play major roles in determining nitrogen or phos phorus limitations and plant responses to added nutrients.