Title of article :
Nutrient dynamics in two seagrass species, Posidonia coriacea and Zostera tasmanica, on Success Bank, Western Australia
Author/Authors :
D.I. Walker، نويسنده , , M.L. Campey، نويسنده , , G.A. Kendrick، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Nutrient concentrations and seasonal differences in atomic ratios (N:P) in plant tissue of Posidonia coriacea Kuo and Cambridge
and Zostera tasmanica Aschers (formerly Heterozostera tasmanica (Syst Bot 27 (2002) 468) were measured from multiple locations
on Success Bank, southwestern Australia, and used to infer nutritional constraints on seagrass vegetative growth, particularly by
phosphorus.
Posidonia plant tissue at the west site had higher nitrogen than the east site in both summer and winter. Nitrogen concentrations
increased in winter, particularly in sheath tissue, but there was little change in root nitrogen concentrations between sites or seasons.
Nitrogen concentrations of leaf tissue were all less than median seagrass values reported by Duarte (Mar Ecol Prog Ser 67 (1990) 201).
The seasonality in nutrient concentrations in plant tissues suggests greater nutritional constraints in summer, during periods of high
growth.Vegetative growth of Posidonia coriaceawasmorenutrient limited than that ofZostera tasmanica.Translocation ofnutrients along
rhizomes to the apexmay ensure that growing points are not nutrient limited and that growth can bemaintained, and wasmore apparent
in Z. tasmanica than P. coriacea. Sexual reproduction placed large demands on P. coriacea through the high investment of nutrients into
fruit, resulting in reduced nutritional constraints on successful seedling recruitment by initially providing seedlings with nutrients
Keywords :
nitrogen , Phosphorus , Nutrient limitation , Posidonia , Zostera , reproduction , growth
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science