TY - JOUR
T1 - Site fertility and leaf nutrients of sympatric evergreen and deciduous species of Quercus in central coastal California
AU - Knops, Johannes M.H.
AU - Koenig, Walter D.
N1 - Funding Information:
The manuscript was improved by the comments of Anne Royalty, Dave Peterson, Bill Schlesinger, and two anonymous reviewers. Financial support was provided by the University of California’s Integrated Hardwoods Range Management Program, the American Philosophical Society, and NSF grant 9411972 to Dave Tilman and Peter Reich. We thank Bill Schlesinger, Beth Thomas and Jane Reikes for performing the nutrient analyses and the Marks for logistic help at Hastings Reservation.
PY - 1997
Y1 - 1997
N2 - Leaf and soil nutrient levels interact with and may each influence the other. We hypothesize that to the extent soil fertility influences the nutritional state of trees, soil fertility should correlate with summer leaf nutrient levels, whereas to the extent that trees influence soil nutrient levels, the quality of leaf litterfall should correlate with soil fertility. We examined these correlations for five sympatric oak species (genus Quercus) in central coastal California. Soil fertility, including both nitrogen and especially phosphorus, correlated significantly with summer leaf nutrient levels. In contrast, phosphorus, but not nitrogen, in the leaf litterfall correlated positively with soil nutrients. These results suggest that soil nitrogen and phosphorus influence tree nutrient levels and that leaf phosphorus, but not leaf nitrogen, influence soil fertility under the trees. Feedback between the soil and the tree for phosphorus, but not nitrogen, is apparently significant and caused by species-specific differences in leaf quality and not by litterfall quality differences within a species. We also compared functional differences between the evergreen and deciduous oak species at our study site. There were no differences in soil nitrogen and only small differences for soil phosphorus between the phenological types. Differences in leaf nutrient concentration were much more pronounced, with the evergreen species having substantially lower levels of both nitrogen and phosphorus. Evergreen species conserved more phosphorus, but not more nitrogen, than the deciduous species, but there was no consistent relationship between retranslocation and either soil nitrogen or phosphorus. These results do not support the hypothesis that evergreenness is an adaptation to low soil fertility in this system.
AB - Leaf and soil nutrient levels interact with and may each influence the other. We hypothesize that to the extent soil fertility influences the nutritional state of trees, soil fertility should correlate with summer leaf nutrient levels, whereas to the extent that trees influence soil nutrient levels, the quality of leaf litterfall should correlate with soil fertility. We examined these correlations for five sympatric oak species (genus Quercus) in central coastal California. Soil fertility, including both nitrogen and especially phosphorus, correlated significantly with summer leaf nutrient levels. In contrast, phosphorus, but not nitrogen, in the leaf litterfall correlated positively with soil nutrients. These results suggest that soil nitrogen and phosphorus influence tree nutrient levels and that leaf phosphorus, but not leaf nitrogen, influence soil fertility under the trees. Feedback between the soil and the tree for phosphorus, but not nitrogen, is apparently significant and caused by species-specific differences in leaf quality and not by litterfall quality differences within a species. We also compared functional differences between the evergreen and deciduous oak species at our study site. There were no differences in soil nitrogen and only small differences for soil phosphorus between the phenological types. Differences in leaf nutrient concentration were much more pronounced, with the evergreen species having substantially lower levels of both nitrogen and phosphorus. Evergreen species conserved more phosphorus, but not more nitrogen, than the deciduous species, but there was no consistent relationship between retranslocation and either soil nitrogen or phosphorus. These results do not support the hypothesis that evergreenness is an adaptation to low soil fertility in this system.
KW - Deciduous
KW - Evergreen
KW - Leaf nutrient levels
KW - Nitrogen
KW - Phosphorus
KW - Quercus
KW - Soil fertility
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0030617822&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1023/A:1009798327200
DO - 10.1023/A:1009798327200
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0030617822
SN - 1385-0237
VL - 130
SP - 121
EP - 131
JO - Plant Ecology
JF - Plant Ecology
IS - 2
ER -