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Evidence of nutrient translocation in response to smoke exposure by the East African ant acacia, Vachellia drepanolobium
Author(s) -
RabideauChilders Richard,
Angier Katherine I. W.,
Dean Brendan Z. M.,
Blumstein Meghan,
Darling Walker S.,
KennedyYoon Annina,
Ziemke Clayton H.,
PerezMartinez Christian A.,
Wu Donghao,
Ye Wenqing,
Yekwayo Inam,
Kimuyu Duncan M.,
Martins Dino J.,
Pierce Naomi E.
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
ecology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.17
H-Index - 63
ISSN - 2045-7758
DOI - 10.1002/ece3.8244
Subject(s) - nutrient , biology , acacia , smoke , seedling , grassland , forb , agronomy , woody plant , plant community , vegetation (pathology) , botany , arid , ecology , ecological succession , chemistry , pathology , medicine , organic chemistry
Fire is a major selective force on arid grassland communities, favoring traits such as the smoke‐induced seed germination response seen in a wide variety of plant species. However, little is known about the relevance of smoke as a cue for plants beyond the seedling stage. We exposed a fire‐adapted savanna tree, Vachellia (= Acacia ) drepanolobium , to smoke and compared nutrient concentrations in leaf and root tissues to unexposed controls. Experiments were performed on three age cohorts: 2‐year‐old, 9‐month‐old, and 3‐month‐old plants. For the 2‐year‐old plants exposed to smoke, carbon and nitrogen concentrations were lower in the leaves and higher in the roots than controls. Less pronounced trends were found for boron and magnesium. In contrast, smoke‐exposed 3‐month‐old plants had lower root nitrogen concentrations than controls. No significant differences were found in the 9‐month‐old plants, and no significant shifts in other nutrient concentrations were observed between plant tissues for any of the three age cohorts. Synthesis : Our findings are consistent with smoke‐induced translocation of nutrients from leaves to roots in 2‐year‐old V .  drepanolobium . This could represent a novel form of fire adaptation, with variation over the course of plant development. The translocation differences between age cohorts highlight the need to investigate smoke response in older plants of other species. Accounting for this adaptation could better inform our understanding of savanna community structure and nutrient flows under fire regimes altered by anthropogenic land use and climate change.

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