Publication | Closed Access
The importance of phyllosphere microbial populations in nitrogen cycling in the Chaco semi-arid woodland
50
Citations
15
References
2005
Year
BiogeochemistryPlant-soil InteractionEngineeringSoil EcologyNitrogen CyclingPlant-soil RelationshipChaco Semi-arid WoodlandPhyllosphere Microbial PopulationsMicrobial EcologySoil Biogeochemical CyclingEnvironmental MicrobiologyForest MeteorologySoil MicrobiologyForest SoilNitrogen GainTropical RainSoil–plant Interface
In tropical rain forest, the interface between leaf surfaces and the atmosphere is a fundamental pathway for nutrient cycling (particulary nitrogen), possibly even more important than the soil–plant interface (Parker 1994, Silver et al . 1996). Most important nutrient exchanges in the phyllosphere–atmosphere interface are mediated by microbial populations. For example, some authors have considered that nitrogen fixation in the phyllosphere is the main mechanism for nitrogen gain in humid tropical ecosystems, because of the substantial nutrient demand resulting from a high plant productivity and the constraint imposed by the generally low nitrogen availability in soil (Ruinen 1974, Salati et al . 1982, Silver et al . 1996).
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