Foliar pH as a new plant trati: van it explain variation in foliar chemistry and carbon cycling processes among subarctiv plant species and types?

Plant traits have become popular as predictors of interspecific variation in important ecosystem properties and processes. Here we introduce foliar pH as a possible new plant trait, and tested whether (1) green leaf pH or leaf litter pH correlates with biochemical and structural foliar traits that a...

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Published in:Oecologia
Main Authors: Cornelissen, J.H.C., Quested, H.M., van Logtestijn, R.S.P, Perez-Harguindeguy, N., Gwynn-Jones, D., Diaz, S., Callaghan, T.V., Press, M.C., Aerts, R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.vu.nl/en/publications/ff70e950-eecf-4828-a703-96cd82ec6ce9
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-005-0269-z
https://hdl.handle.net/1871.1/ff70e950-eecf-4828-a703-96cd82ec6ce9
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spelling ftvuamstcris:oai:research.vu.nl:publications/ff70e950-eecf-4828-a703-96cd82ec6ce9 2024-09-09T20:10:55+00:00 Foliar pH as a new plant trati: van it explain variation in foliar chemistry and carbon cycling processes among subarctiv plant species and types? Cornelissen, J.H.C. Quested, H.M. van Logtestijn, R.S.P Perez-Harguindeguy, N. Gwynn-Jones, D. Diaz, S. Callaghan, T.V. Press, M.C. Aerts, R. 2006 https://research.vu.nl/en/publications/ff70e950-eecf-4828-a703-96cd82ec6ce9 https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-005-0269-z https://hdl.handle.net/1871.1/ff70e950-eecf-4828-a703-96cd82ec6ce9 eng eng https://research.vu.nl/en/publications/ff70e950-eecf-4828-a703-96cd82ec6ce9 info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Cornelissen , J H C , Quested , H M , van Logtestijn , R S P , Perez-Harguindeguy , N , Gwynn-Jones , D , Diaz , S , Callaghan , T V , Press , M C & Aerts , R 2006 , ' Foliar pH as a new plant trati: van it explain variation in foliar chemistry and carbon cycling processes among subarctiv plant species and types? ' , Oecologia , vol. 147 , pp. 315-326 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-005-0269-z article 2006 ftvuamstcris https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-005-0269-z 2024-08-22T00:13:34Z Plant traits have become popular as predictors of interspecific variation in important ecosystem properties and processes. Here we introduce foliar pH as a possible new plant trait, and tested whether (1) green leaf pH or leaf litter pH correlates with biochemical and structural foliar traits that are linked to biogeochemical cycling; (2) there is consistent variation in green leaf pH or leaf litter pH among plant types as defined by nutrient uptake mode and higher taxonomy; (3) green leaf pH can predict a significant proportion of variation in leaf digestibility among plant species and types; (4) leaf litter pH can predict a significant proportion of variation in leaf litter decomposability among plant species and types. We found some evidence in support of all four hypotheses for a wide range of species in a subarctic flora, although cryptogams (fern allies and a moss) tended to weaken the patterns by showing relatively poor leaf digestibility or litter decomposability at a given pH. Among seed plant species, green leaf pH itself explained only up to a third of the interspecific variation in leaf digestibility and leaf litter up to a quarter of the interspecific variation in leaf litter decomposability. However, foliar pH substantially improved the power of foliar lignin and/or cellulose concentrations as predictors of these processes when added to regression models as a second variable. When species were aggregated into plant types as defined by higher taxonomy and nutrient uptake mode, green-specific leaf area was a more powerful predictor of digestibility or decomposability than any of the biochemical traits including pH. The usefulness of foliar pH as a new predictive trait, whether or not in combination with other traits, remains to be tested across more plant species, types and biomes, and also in relation to other plant or ecosystem traits and processes. © Springer-Verlag 2005. Article in Journal/Newspaper Subarctic Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU): Research Portal Oecologia 147 2 315 326
institution Open Polar
collection Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU): Research Portal
op_collection_id ftvuamstcris
language English
description Plant traits have become popular as predictors of interspecific variation in important ecosystem properties and processes. Here we introduce foliar pH as a possible new plant trait, and tested whether (1) green leaf pH or leaf litter pH correlates with biochemical and structural foliar traits that are linked to biogeochemical cycling; (2) there is consistent variation in green leaf pH or leaf litter pH among plant types as defined by nutrient uptake mode and higher taxonomy; (3) green leaf pH can predict a significant proportion of variation in leaf digestibility among plant species and types; (4) leaf litter pH can predict a significant proportion of variation in leaf litter decomposability among plant species and types. We found some evidence in support of all four hypotheses for a wide range of species in a subarctic flora, although cryptogams (fern allies and a moss) tended to weaken the patterns by showing relatively poor leaf digestibility or litter decomposability at a given pH. Among seed plant species, green leaf pH itself explained only up to a third of the interspecific variation in leaf digestibility and leaf litter up to a quarter of the interspecific variation in leaf litter decomposability. However, foliar pH substantially improved the power of foliar lignin and/or cellulose concentrations as predictors of these processes when added to regression models as a second variable. When species were aggregated into plant types as defined by higher taxonomy and nutrient uptake mode, green-specific leaf area was a more powerful predictor of digestibility or decomposability than any of the biochemical traits including pH. The usefulness of foliar pH as a new predictive trait, whether or not in combination with other traits, remains to be tested across more plant species, types and biomes, and also in relation to other plant or ecosystem traits and processes. © Springer-Verlag 2005.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Cornelissen, J.H.C.
Quested, H.M.
van Logtestijn, R.S.P
Perez-Harguindeguy, N.
Gwynn-Jones, D.
Diaz, S.
Callaghan, T.V.
Press, M.C.
Aerts, R.
spellingShingle Cornelissen, J.H.C.
Quested, H.M.
van Logtestijn, R.S.P
Perez-Harguindeguy, N.
Gwynn-Jones, D.
Diaz, S.
Callaghan, T.V.
Press, M.C.
Aerts, R.
Foliar pH as a new plant trati: van it explain variation in foliar chemistry and carbon cycling processes among subarctiv plant species and types?
author_facet Cornelissen, J.H.C.
Quested, H.M.
van Logtestijn, R.S.P
Perez-Harguindeguy, N.
Gwynn-Jones, D.
Diaz, S.
Callaghan, T.V.
Press, M.C.
Aerts, R.
author_sort Cornelissen, J.H.C.
title Foliar pH as a new plant trati: van it explain variation in foliar chemistry and carbon cycling processes among subarctiv plant species and types?
title_short Foliar pH as a new plant trati: van it explain variation in foliar chemistry and carbon cycling processes among subarctiv plant species and types?
title_full Foliar pH as a new plant trati: van it explain variation in foliar chemistry and carbon cycling processes among subarctiv plant species and types?
title_fullStr Foliar pH as a new plant trati: van it explain variation in foliar chemistry and carbon cycling processes among subarctiv plant species and types?
title_full_unstemmed Foliar pH as a new plant trati: van it explain variation in foliar chemistry and carbon cycling processes among subarctiv plant species and types?
title_sort foliar ph as a new plant trati: van it explain variation in foliar chemistry and carbon cycling processes among subarctiv plant species and types?
publishDate 2006
url https://research.vu.nl/en/publications/ff70e950-eecf-4828-a703-96cd82ec6ce9
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-005-0269-z
https://hdl.handle.net/1871.1/ff70e950-eecf-4828-a703-96cd82ec6ce9
genre Subarctic
genre_facet Subarctic
op_source Cornelissen , J H C , Quested , H M , van Logtestijn , R S P , Perez-Harguindeguy , N , Gwynn-Jones , D , Diaz , S , Callaghan , T V , Press , M C & Aerts , R 2006 , ' Foliar pH as a new plant trati: van it explain variation in foliar chemistry and carbon cycling processes among subarctiv plant species and types? ' , Oecologia , vol. 147 , pp. 315-326 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-005-0269-z
op_relation https://research.vu.nl/en/publications/ff70e950-eecf-4828-a703-96cd82ec6ce9
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container_title Oecologia
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