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来源类型 | Articles |
规范类型 | 论文 |
The nitrogen supply from soils and insects during growth of the pitcher plants Nepenthes mirabilis, Cephalotus follicularis and Darlingtonia california | |
Sayer, J.A. | |
发表日期 | 1997 |
出处 | Oecologia 112: 464-471 |
出版年 | 1997 |
语种 | 英语 |
摘要 | This study investigated the nitrogen (N) acquisition from soil and insect capture during the growth of three species of pitcher plants, Nepenthes mirabilis, Cephalotus follicularis dan Darlingtonia californica. 15N/14/N natural abundance ratios (d15N) of plants and pitchers of different age, non-carnivolrous reference plants, and insect prey were used to estimate proportional contributions of insects to the N content of leaves and whole plants. Young Nepenthes leaves (phyllodes) carrying closed pitchers comprised major sinks for N and developed mainly from insect N captured elsewhere on the plant. Their d15N values of up to 7.2 were higher than the average d15N value of captured insects (mean d15N value=5.3). In leaves carrying old pitchers that are acting as a N source, the d15N decreased to 3.0 indicating either an increasing contribution of soil N to those plant parts which in fact captured the insects or N gain from N2 fixation by microorganisms which may exist in old pitchers. The d15N value of N in water collected from old pitchers was 1.2 and contained free amino acids. The fraction of insect N in young and old pitchers and their associated leaves decreased from 1.0 to 0.3 mg g-1. This fraction of insect decreased further with the size of the investigated tiller. Nepenthes contained on average 61.5 + 7.6% (mean + SD, range 50-71%) insect N based on the N content of a whole tiller. In the absence of suitable non-carnivorous reference plants for Cephalotus, d15N values were assessed across a developmental sequence from young plants lacking pitchers to large adults with up to 38 pitchers. The data indicated dependence on soil N until 4 pitchers had opened. Beyond that stage plant size increased with the number of catching pitchers but the fraction of soil N remained high. Large Cephalotus plants were estimated to derive 26 + 5.9% (mean + SD of the three largest plants; range: 19-30%) of the N form insects. In Cephalotus we observed an increased d15N value in sink versus source pitchers of about 1.2 on average. Source and sink pitchers of Darlingtonia had a similar d15N value, but plant N in this species showed d15N signals closer to that of insect contributed 76.4 + 8.4% (range 57-90%) to total pitcher N content. The data suggest complex patterns of partitioning of insect and soil-derived N between source and sink regions in pitcher plants and possibly higher dependence on insect N than recorded elsewhere for Drosera species |
主题 | soil ; insects ; nitrogen ; Nepenthes |
URL | https://www.cifor.org/library/14/ |
来源智库 | Center for International Forestry Research (Indonesia) |
资源类型 | 智库出版物 |
条目标识符 | http://119.78.100.153/handle/2XGU8XDN/89675 |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Sayer, J.A.. The nitrogen supply from soils and insects during growth of the pitcher plants Nepenthes mirabilis, Cephalotus follicularis and Darlingtonia california. 1997. |
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