Thursday, 10 November 2005 - 8:30 AM
318-1

Foliar Uptake and Distribution of 15NH4+ and 15NO3- in Evergreen and Deciduous California Oak Seedlings in a Common Garden Experiment.

Xinhua He, CAROLINE BLEDSOE, WILLIAM HORWATH, and ROBERT ZASOSKI. University of California Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 956168627

There is little information about preferential competition for NH4+ or NO3- among oaks and their adjacent annuals. Deciduous blue oak and white oak, and everygreen coast live oak were transplanted and cohabited for two years in a California oak woodland. Leaves of fifty selected oak seedlings were inserted into a small 2 ml vial containing 1.6 ml 1.0% 15N as (15NH4)2SO4 or K15NO3. Each oak species, along with one of each adjacent annual species of grass, forb and clover were sampled after 9-day-15N-labeling. Ectomycorrhizal colonization of oak roots was ~75% and arbuscular mycorrhizal colonization was ~30 for oak and annual plant species. Live oak biomass was double that of blue and white oak. However, white oak had significant higher total N content than live oak, and the latter than blue oak. After 9-day-15N-labeling, white oak had significant greater total 15N accumulation (5.7mg/plant) than both blue and live oak (3.5mg/plant), irrespective of 15NO3- or 15NH4+ supplied. In contrast, root 15N accumulation in live oak was greater than that of other two oak species. Root 15N allocation was greater when 15NO3- was used, compared to 15NH4+. In general, 45–50% of labeled 15N was remained in blue and live oak seedlings, while around 60% in white oak seedlings. The above results suggest that different oak species has distinctive 15NH4+ or 15NO3- accumulation strategies. Meanwhile, leaf δ15N values of adjacent grass, forb and clover increased from 0.8~3.1‰ to 13~40‰ and to 10~40‰, no matter whether 15NH4+ or 15NO3- was supplied and which oak species was surrounded, indicating that 15N has also been translocated to the adjacent annual plants through mycorrhizal interconnections and/or soil pathways. The possible mechanisms for nitrogen translocation among plants in oak woodlands might be through either mycorrhizal interconnections, soil pathways, or both.

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