Article
PLASTICITY OF BIOMASS COMPONENT ALLOCATION PATTERNS IN SEMIARID TAMAULIPAN THORNSCRUB AND DRY TEMPERATE PINE SPECIES OF NORTHEASTERN MEXICO
Fecha
2011Autor
Návar Cháidez, José de Jesús
Institución
Resumen
The question of how plant communities
respond to variation in the availability of
resources in the environment was answered
by testing the hypotheses of true adjustments
and ontogenetic drift in biomass allocation
patterns. The slopes of allometric equations
that estimate biomass components as
a function of diameter at breast height, D;
root profi les, and the ratio of belowground to
aboveground biomass, BGB:AGB, vs. basal
diameter, Db, supported these hypotheses in
Mexico’s northeast Tamaulipan thornscrub
and dry temperate pine forests. The results
showed through a covariance analysis that
plant communities allocate biomass components
differently; Tamaulipan thornscrub
species having larger root biomass allocation
per unit Db than dry temperate pine
forests in the early stages of development.
Tamaulipan thornscrub roots are smaller and
less thick and larger in number, and differences
in taper were noted for both lateral
and tap root systems. This report concludes
that environmental factors (more abundant
soil nutrients, but less water availability in
Tamaulipan thornscrub communities) plays
an important role in explaining higher BGB:
ABG ratios but differences can be eventually
obscured by the developmental stage of
these plant communities.