4.7 Article

Leaf N resorption efficiency and litter N mineralization rate have a genotypic tradeoff in a silver birch population

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 99, Issue 5, Pages 1227-1235

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.2176

Keywords

Betula pendula; broad-sense heritability; genotype; leaf litter; mineralization; nitrogen; population; resorption efficiency; resorption proficiency; tradeoff

Categories

Funding

  1. Academy of Finland [1122444]

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Plants enhance N use efficiency by resorbing N from senescing leaves. This can affect litter N mineralization rate due to the C:N-ratio requirements of microbial growth. We examined genotypic links between leaf N resorption and litter mineralization by collecting leaves and litter from 19 Betula pendula genotypes and following the N release of litter patches on forest ground. We found significant genotypic variation for N resorption efficiency, litter N concentration, cumulative three-year patch N-input and litter N release with high broad-sense heritabilities (H-2 = 0.28-0.65). The genotype means of N resorption efficiency varied from 46% to 65% and correlated negatively with the genotype means of litter N concentration, cumulative patch N-input and litter N release. NH4+ yield under patches had a positive genotypic correlation with the cumulative patch N-input. During the first year of litter decomposition, genotypes varied from N immobilization (max 2.71 mg/g dry litter) to N release (max 1.41 mg/g dry litter), creating a genotypic tradeoff between the N conserved by resorption and the N available for root uptake during the growing season. We speculate that this tradeoff is one likely reason for the remarkably wide genotypic range of N resorption efficiencies in our birch population.

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