4.5 Article

Nitrogen sharing and water source partitioning co-occur in estuarine wetlands

Journal

FUNCTIONAL PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 4, Pages 410-417

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/FP14141

Keywords

actinorhizal plant; mangroves; paper-bark tea tree; resource partitioning; resource sharing; swamp oak

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Funding

  1. National Centre of Excellence for Groundwater Research and Training
  2. ARC [DP1096749]

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Plant-plant interactions are particularly complex in multi-resource limited environments. The aim of this study was to assess species interactions in estuarine wetlands where both N and fresh water are limited. We combined stable isotope methods and dissimilarity analyses to compare interspecific interactions in N source use and water source use. Both Melaleuca quinquenervia (Cav.) S. T Blake and Avicennia marina (Forssk.) Vierh. had a lower leaf delta N-15 when they were growing together with the N-fixer Casuarina glauca Sieb. ex Spreng. compared with those trees growing in monospecific stands, but their water isotopes, delta O-18 and delta D, were different from C. glauca. Our results indicate that the N-fixer C. glauca shared their N with co-existing neighbours, either indirectly or directly, but that water sources were partitioned among them. Further analyses showed that M. quinquenervia and C. glauca had lower dissimilarity in N source use but higher dissimilarity in water source use than the C. glauca-A. marina pair, implying that the co-existence between M. quinquenervia and C. glauca is relatively stable. Our results suggest that facilitative interaction and resource partitioning can co-occur in estuarine wetlands, and which could be important in maintaining diversity across resource gradients.

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