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EFFECTS OF VINE COMPETITION ON AVAILABILITY OF LIGHT, WATER, AND NITROGEN TO A TREE HOST (LIQUIDAMBAR STYRACIFLUA)

83

Citations

38

References

1993

Year

Abstract

Competitive effects of vines on their tree hosts are well documented, but the mechanisms involved in these interactions are poorly understood. The objectives of this study were to measure the effects of below‐ and/or aboveground competition from the vines Lonicera japonica and Parthenocissus quinquefolia on availability of light, water, and nitrogen to the host tree Liquidambar styraciflua , and to examine the relationship between resource availability and tree growth. Light penetration through tree canopies, pre‐dawn leaf water potential, and leaf nitrogen concentration were used as predictors of light, water, and nitrogen availability to the tree, respectively. Vine presence significantly reduced light penetration through the tree canopies, but this reduction was not clearly related to the growth responses of trees. Vines did not reduce the pre‐dawn leaf water potential of competing trees, which was consistently above ‐0.5 MPa for the duration of the study. Leaf nitrogen concentration of trees, on the other hand, was significantly reduced by belowground competition with L. japonica. The positive correlation between the annual average leaf nitrogen concentration and tree diameter growth suggested that competition for nitrogen mediated the effects of belowground competition of vines on tree growth.

References

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