Responses of native woody taxa in Banksia woodland to incursion of groundwater and nutrients from bordering agricultural land

Citation
Am. Grigg et al., Responses of native woody taxa in Banksia woodland to incursion of groundwater and nutrients from bordering agricultural land, AUST J BOT, 48(6), 2000, pp. 777-792
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
ISSN journal
00671924 → ACNP
Volume
48
Issue
6
Year of publication
2000
Pages
777 - 792
Database
ISI
SICI code
0067-1924(2000)48:6<777:RONWTI>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
Effects of incursion of water and nutrients from agricultural land on adjoi ning native Banksia woodland were examined near Moora, Western Australia, b y using a 100-m-wide belt transect from the paddock edge into virgin bush. Transect zones 0 20, 20 50 and 100 300 m inwards were designated as 'hedge' , 'transition' and 'inner bush', respectively. Numbers of species of native woody taxa increased from 28 to 42 and plant densities increased from 2200 to 14 900 plants per hectare from hedge through transition to inner bush, while collective total standing biomass (above and below ground) of woody s pecies decreased from 157 to 32 t dry matter per hectare. Data for nutrient contents of this total biomass indicated that total nutrient loads in resp ect of calcium, potassium, sulfur, phosphorus, magnesium, zinc, copper and sodium were closely related to relative amounts of biomass in the three zon es, but hedge vegetation was appreciably enriched in nitrogen but depleted in manganese and chlorine compared to inner bush. Diversity indices indicat ed differential responses of species to agricultural influence. The dominan t tree species, Banksia prionotes, represented 91, 87 and 58% of the total biomass of woody taxa in hedge, transition and inner bush, respectively. Gr owth ring analyses of basal trunk xylem indicated that this seeder species had recruited after a hot burn in 1963 coincident with land clearing. Since then, annual trunk-area increments in hedge trees have been consistently m uch greater than in transition and bush. Net annual productivities, dry mat ter allocation profiles and current leaf areas of B. prionotes showed that the average hedge tree weighed 167 kg total dry matter and was currently in creasing at 11.9 kg per year and was in the process of achieving net dry ma tter gains of 420 g m (2) of leaf surface. Comparable figures for transitio n trees were 61 kg, 4.7 kg per year and 360 g m (2), for inner bush trees 1 2.7 kg, 1.1 kg per year and 230 g m (2). Results are related to recent stud ies on Banksia woodlands and general information on ecotones and their attr ibutes.