4.7 Article

Calcium fertilization increases the concentration of calcium in sapwood and calcium oxalate in foliage of red spruce

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL AND EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 67, Issue 1, Pages 277-283

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envexpbot.2009.07.007

Keywords

Calcium oxalate; Red spruce; Dendrochemistry; Calcium cycling

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Calcium cycling plays a key role in the health and productivity of red Spruce forests in the northeastern US. A portion of the flowpath of calcium within forests includes translocation as Ca(2+) in sapwood and accumulation as crystals of calcium oxalate in foliage. Concentrations of Ca in these tree tissues have been used as markers of environmental change due to acidic deposition or forest management practices. We compared the effects of Ca fertilization treatment on Ca concentration in wood and Ca and oxalate (Ox) concentration in foliage at two locations with different initial concentrations of Ca in the soil. We found greater amounts of Ca in wood from the high-Ca location than from the low-Ca location. Ca concentration was greater in wood formed in the 1970s than for wood formed in the 1980s, the outermost decadal band in these samples. The Ca-treatment was detected as an increased concentration of Ca in the 1970s and 1980s decadal bands. We also found that variation in Ca and Ox in foliage was essentially stoichiometric. The appearance and response to chemical tests of crystals in foliage were consistent with identification as calcium oxalate. The increased Ca in wood after Ca-treatment of the soil Supports the use of dendrochemistry of base cations to investigate environmental change. However. differences in Ca concentration between the two outermost decadal bands of wood illustrate that internal processes of translocation and storage also affect Ca concentration. Calcium oxalate production in foliage diverts carbon from ordinary biosynthesis and energy-yielding processes. This sequestration, shedding, and decomposition of foliage may represent a significant and under-recognized contribution to carbon and Ca cycling. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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