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Tree Physiology Advance Access originally published online on June 24, 2009
Tree Physiology 2009 29(8):1033-1045; doi:10.1093/treephys/tpp044
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© The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Architectural plasticity in young Eucalyptus marginata on restored bauxite mines and adjacent natural forest in south-western Australia

Timothy M. Bleby1,2, Ian J. Colquhoun3 and Mark A. Adams4

1 School of Plant Biology, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley WA 6009, Australia
2 Corresponding author (bleby{at}plants.uwa.edu.au)
3 Alcoa World Alumina Australia, P.O. Box 172 Pinjarra, WA 6208, Australia
4 Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources, The University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia


   Abstract

The aboveground architecture of Eucalyptus marginata (Jarrah) was investigated in chronosequences of young trees (2.5, 5 and 10 m height) growing in a seasonally dry climate in a natural forest environment with intact soils, and on adjacent restored bauxite mine sites on soils with highly modified A and B horizons above an intact C horizon. Compared to forest trees, trees on restored sites were much younger and faster growing, with straighter, more clearly defined main stems and deeper, narrower crowns containing a greater number of branches that were longer, thinner and more vertically angled. Trees on restored sites also had a higher fraction of biomass in leaves than forest trees, as indicated by 20–25% thicker leaves, 30–70% greater leaf area, 10–30% greater leaf area to sapwood area ratios and 5–30% lesser branch Huber values. Differences in crown architecture and biomass distribution were consistent with putatively greater soil-water, nutrient and light availability on restored sites. Our results demonstrate that under the same climatic conditions, E. marginata displays a high degree of plasticity of aboveground architecture in response to the net effects of resource availability and soil environment. These differences in architecture are likely to have functional consequences in relation to tree hydraulics and growth that, on larger scales, is likely to affect the water and carbon balances of restored forest ecosystems. This study highlights substrate as a significant determinant of tree architecture in water-limited environments. It further suggests that the architecture of young trees on restored sites may need to change again if they are to survive likely longer-term changes in resource availability.

Keywords: hydraulic architecture, leaf area, leaf area to sapwood area ratio, mine site rehabilitation, phenotypic plasticity, resource availability

Received February 23, 2009; Accepted June 4, 2009


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