61 research outputs found
N–P stoichiometry in soil and leaves of Pinus massoniana forest at different stand ages in the subtropical soil erosion area of China
Drought-deciduous behavior reduces nutrient losses from temperate deciduous trees under severe drought
Does the commonly used estimator of nutrient resorption in tree foliage actually measure what it claims to?
Modest enhancement of nitrogen conservation via retranslocation in response to gradients in N supply and leaf N status
Patterns of litterfall and nutrient return at different altitudes in evergreen hardwood forests of Central Taiwan
Nutrient resorption or accumulation of desert plants with contrasting sodium regulation strategies
Stage-dependent stoichiometric homeostasis and responses of nutrient resorption in Amaranthus mangostanus to nitrogen and phosphorus addition
Pathogen infection drives patterns of nutrient resorption in citrus plants
Nutrient resorption processes in the plants infected by pathogen remain poorly understood. Huanglongbing (HLB) is a destructive disease of citrus. HLB-pathogen ‘Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus’ grows specifically in the phloem of hosts and may cause problems in the plant vascular system after infection. Therefore, it brings a great concern about the phloem nutrient transport and nutrient intra-cycling in HLB-affected plants. We investigated the effects of ‘Ca. L. asiaticus’ infection on nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) concentrations and resorption in different citrus species (i.e. Citrus reticulata, Citrus limon and Citrus maxima). HLB-pathogen infection had distinctive impacts on nutrient resorption in different species. P resorption efficiency substantially decreased in infected C. reticulata plants relative to the healthy plants in summer, which may account for the marked decrease in the average fruit yield. P resorption was more efficient in infected C. limon plants than in the healthy plants. However, for C. maxima plants, HLB had no significant effects on N:P ratio in live leaves and resorption efficiency as well as on fruit yield. Keeping efficient internal nutrient cycling can be a strategy of citrus species being tolerant to HLB
Fitness of Mango for Colonization in Low Fertility Soils and Dry Lands: Examination of Leaf Life-Span, Leaf Nutrient Resorption, and Nutrient Use Efficiency in Elite Mango Varieties
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