Ecological Significance of Inherent Variation in Relative Growth Rate and Its Components
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] T. Ingestad,et al. Nitrogen stress in birch seedlings. II. N, K, P, Ca, and Mg nutrition , 1979 .
[2] V. Gutschick. Optimization of specific leaf mass, internal CO2 concentration, and chlorophyll content in crop canopies , 1988 .
[3] Jan P. Bakker,et al. Disturbance in Grasslands , 1987, Geobotany.
[4] J. P. Grime,et al. AN ANALYSIS OF COMPETITIVE ABILITY IN THREE PERENNIAL GRASSES , 1976 .
[5] M. J. Chadwick,et al. Experimental Investigations into the Mineral Nutrition of Several Grass Species: IV. Nitrogen Level , 1964 .
[6] A. Werf,et al. The importance of relative growth rate and associated traits for competition between species during vegetation succession , 1998 .
[7] G. Evans,et al. The quantitative analysis of plant growth , 1972 .
[8] N. Kachi,et al. Differential salt tolerance of two Artemisia species growing in contrasting coastal habitats , 2000, Ecological Research.
[9] H. Poorter,et al. The fate of acquired carbon in plants: chemical composition and construction costs , 1997 .
[10] H. Poorter,et al. Growth and carbon economy of a fast- growing and a slow-growing grass species as dependent on ontogeny , 1992 .
[11] M. Adams,et al. What determines interspecific variation in relative growth rate of Eucalyptus seedlings? , 2005, Oecologia.
[12] R. Hunt,et al. GROWTH AND PARTITIONING , 2008 .
[13] J. Ehleringer. Comparative ecophysiology of Encelia farinosa and Encelia frutescens , 1988, Oecologia.
[14] R. Hunt. Plant Growth Curves: The Functional Approach to Plant Growth Analysis , 1983 .
[15] H. Lambers,et al. A genetic analysis of relative growth rate and underlying components in Hordeum spontaneum , 2004, Oecologia.
[16] H. Poorter,et al. The chemical composition and anatomical structure of leaves of grass species differing in relative growth rate , 1994 .
[17] M. Werger,et al. Foliar nutrients in relation to growth, allocation and leaf traits in seedlings of a wide range of woody plant species and types , 1997, Oecologia.
[18] R. Aerts. The advantages of being evergreen. , 1995, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[19] Hendrik Poorter,et al. Avoiding bias in calculations of relative growth rate. , 2002, Annals of botany.
[20] H. Lambers,et al. Causes and consequences of variation in growth rate and productivity of higher plants , 1990 .
[21] V. Smith,et al. PHYSIOLOGICAL AND ANATOMICAL ASPECTS OF PHOTOSYNTHESIS OF TWO AGROSTIS SPECIES AT A SUB-ANTARCTIC ISLAND. , 1986, The New phytologist.
[22] A. Bradshaw,et al. EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATIONS INTO THE MINERAL NUTRITION OF SEVERAL GRASS SPECIES , 2016 .
[23] Hendrik Poorter,et al. Is inherent variation in RGR determined by LAR at low irradiance and by NAR at high irradiance? A review of herbaceous species , 1998 .
[24] M. Schwarz,et al. Growth Response to Salinity at High Levels of Carbon Dioxide , 1984 .
[25] R. Yanai,et al. The Ecology of Root Lifespan , 1997 .
[26] H. Lambers,et al. Carbon and nitrogen economy of 24 wild species differing in relative growth rate. , 1990, Plant physiology.
[27] J. Čatský. Inherent Variation in Plant Growth. Physiological Mechanisms and Ecological Consequences , 1999, Photosynthetica (Praha).
[28] G. E. Briggs,et al. METHODS AND SIGNIFICANT RELATIONS IN THE QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF PLANT GROWTH. , 1920 .
[29] H. Lambers,et al. A physiological analysis of genotypic variation in relative growth rate: Can growth rate confer ecological advantage? , 1987 .
[30] Byron B. Lamont,et al. Leaf specific mass confounds leaf density and thickness , 1991, Oecologia.
[31] Hendrik Poorter. Plant Growth and Carbon Economy , 2002 .
[32] Lourens Poorter,et al. Growth responses of 15 rain‐forest tree species to a light gradient: the relative importance of morphological and physiological traits , 1999 .
[33] F. S. Chapin,et al. The Mineral Nutrition of Wild Plants , 1980 .
[34] J. C. Hull,et al. Effects of nitrogen on photosynthesis and growth rates of four California annual grasses. , 1990 .
[35] Eric Garnier,et al. Plant growth analysis: an evaluation of experimental design and computational methods , 1996 .
[36] E. Garnier,et al. Variation in relative growth rate and its components in the annual Polygonum aviculare in relation to habitat disturbance and seed size , 1996, Oecologia.
[37] D. R. Causton,et al. The Biometry of Plant Growth , 1982 .
[38] F. Schieving,et al. Carbon gain in a multispecies canopy: the role of specific leaf area and photosynthetic nitrogen‐use efficiency in the tragedy of the commons , 1999 .
[39] R. Aerts. Nutrient use efficiency in evergreen and deciduous species from heathlands , 1990, Oecologia.
[40] M. Ball. Salinity tolerance in the mangroves Aegiceras corniculatum and Avicennia marina. I: Water use in relation to growth, carbon partitioning, and salt balance , 1988 .
[41] A. Fitter,et al. Growth temperature influences the underlying components of relative growth rate: an investigation using inherently fast‐ and slow‐growing plant species , 2002 .
[42] H. Lambers,et al. The relationship between the relative growth rate and nitrogen economy of alpine and lowland Poa species , 1996 .
[43] A. Specht,et al. Canopy structure in Eucalyptus-dominated communities in Australia along climatic gradients , 1989 .
[44] K. Fichtner,et al. The effect of nitrogen nutrition on growth and biomass partitioning of annual plants originating from habitats of different nitrogen availability , 1992, Oecologia.
[45] H. Lambers,et al. Effects of N‐supply on the rates of photosynthesis and shoot and root respiration of inherently fast‐ and slow‐growing monocotyledonous species , 1993 .
[46] P. Keddy,et al. The relationship between relative growth rate and sensitivity to nutrient stress in twenty-eight species of emergent macrophytes , 1988 .
[47] E. Garnier,et al. Resource capture, biomass allocation and growth in herbaceous plants. , 1991, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[48] K. Reiling,et al. The response of native, herbaceous species to ozone: growth and fluorescence screening , 1992 .
[49] J. Ehleringer,et al. Photosynthesis in Encelia farinosa Gray in Response to Decreasing Leaf Water Potential. , 1984, Plant physiology.
[50] J. McGraw,et al. The analysis of plant growth in ecological and evolutionary studies. , 1990, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[51] R. Villar,et al. Comparison of leaf construction costs in woody species with differing leaf life-spans in contrasting ecosystems. , 2001, The New phytologist.
[52] H. Mooney,et al. Photosynthetic capacity and carbon allocation patterns in diverse growth forms of Eucalyptus , 2004, Oecologia.
[53] Z. Baruch. Ecophysiological Aspects of the Invasion by African Grasses and Their Impact on Biodiversity and Function of Neotropical Savannas , 1996 .
[54] H. Poorter,et al. Chemical composition of 24 wild species differing in relative growth rate , 1992 .
[55] J. Bloor. Light responses of shade-tolerant tropical tree species in north-east Queensland: a comparison of forest- and shadehouse-grown seedlings , 2003, Journal of Tropical Ecology.
[56] Tsuyoshi Kobayashi,et al. Growth analysis and reproductive allocation of Japanese forbs and grasses in relation to organ toughness under trampling. , 1999 .
[57] F. S. Chapin,et al. The Mineral Nutrition of Wild Plants Revisited: A Re-evaluation of Processes and Patterns , 1999 .
[58] P. Coley,et al. HERBIVORY AND DEFENSIVE CHARACTERISTICS OF TREE SPECIES IN A LOWLAND TROPICAL FOREST , 1983 .
[59] A. Freijsen,et al. On ecological inference from laboratory experiments conducted under optimum conditions , 1994 .
[60] H. Olff,et al. Biomass partitioning, architecture and turnover of six herbaceous species from habitats with different nutrient supply , 2000, Plant Ecology.
[61] R. Aerts,et al. Nitrogen-use efficiency : a biologically meaningful definition? , 1987 .
[62] Eric Garnier,et al. Ecosystem productivity can be predicted from potential relative growth rate and species abundance. , 2006, Ecology letters.
[63] G. Riechers. Plants and Microclimate , 1984 .
[64] A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF GEUM RIVALE L. AND G. URBANUM L. TO DETERMINE THOSE FACTORS CONTROLLING THEIR ALTITUDINAL DISTRIBUTION: I. GROWTH IN CONTROLLED AND NATURAL ENVIRONMENTS. , 1986, The New phytologist.
[65] Mark Westoby,et al. A leaf-height-seed (LHS) plant ecology strategy scheme , 1998, Plant and Soil.
[66] Roderick Hunt,et al. Relative growth-rate: its range and adaptive significance in a local flora. , 1975 .
[67] J. P. Grime,et al. Evidence for the Existence of Three Primary Strategies in Plants and Its Relevance to Ecological and Evolutionary Theory , 1977, The American Naturalist.
[68] H. Lambers,et al. The causes of inherently slow growth in alpine plants : an analysis based on the underlying carbon economies of alpine and lowland Poa species , 1996 .
[69] P. Reich,et al. Leaf Life‐Span in Relation to Leaf, Plant, and Stand Characteristics among Diverse Ecosystems , 1992 .
[70] I. H. Rorison. THE RESPONSE TO PHOSPHORUS OF SOME ECOLOGICALLY DISTINCT PLANT SPECIES , 1968 .
[71] A. Stockey,et al. Predicting secondary succession in wetland mesocosms on the basis of autecological information on seeds and seedlings , 1994 .
[72] V. H. Blackman,et al. The Compound Interest Law and Plant Growth , 1919 .
[73] J. A. Barone,et al. HERBIVORY AND PLANT DEFENSES IN TROPICAL FORESTS , 1996 .
[74] L. R. Benjamin,et al. Sources of Variation and Measures of Variability in Even-aged Stands of Plants , 1986 .
[75] Hendrik Poorter,et al. Leaf area ratio and net assimilation rate of 24 wild species differing in relative growth rate , 1990, Oecologia.
[76] Hendrik Poorter,et al. Inherent Variation in Growth Rate Between Higher Plants: A Search for Physiological Causes and Ecological Consequences , 1992 .
[77] D. Tilman,et al. Plant allocation, growth rate and successional status , 1994 .
[78] J. M. Scriber. Limiting effects of low leaf-water content on the nitrogen utilization, energy budget, and larval growth ofHyalophora cecropia (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae) , 1977, Oecologia.
[79] Z. Baruch,et al. Photosynthetic responses of native and introduced C4 grasses from Venezuelan savannas , 1985, Oecologia.
[80] J. Wilson. THE COST OF HEAVY‐METAL TOLERANCE: AN EXAMPLE , 1988, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[81] H. Lambers,et al. Analysis of specific leaf area and photosynthesis of two inbred lines of Plantago major differing in relative growth rate. , 1989, The New phytologist.
[82] T. Pons. AN ECOPHYSIOLOGICAL STUDY IN THE FIELD LAYER OF ASH COPPICE II EXPERIMENTS WITH GEUM URBANUM AND CIRSIUM PALUSTRE IN DIFFERENT LIGHT INTENSITIES , 1977 .
[83] E. Garnier,et al. Leaf anatomy, specific mass and water content in congeneric annual and perennial grass species , 1994 .
[84] O. Atkin,et al. A comparison of the respiratory processes and growth rate of selected Australian alpine and related lowland plant species. , 1990 .
[85] H. Reynolds,et al. The ecological significance of plasticity in root weight ratio in response to nitrogen: Opinion , 1996, Plant and Soil.
[86] H. Poorter,et al. INTERSPECIFIC VARIATION IN RELATIVE GROWTH RATE : ON ECOLOGICAL CAUSES AND PHYSIOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES , 2003 .
[87] D. Hodáňová. Plant strategies and vegetation processes , 1981, Biologia Plantarum.
[88] H. Ellenberg,et al. Vegetation Ecology of Central Europe. , 1989 .
[89] Bill Shipley,et al. Structured interspecific determinants of specific leaf area in 34 species of herbaceous angiosperms , 1995 .
[90] R. F. Parsons. The Significance of Growth-Rate Comparisons for Plant Ecology , 1968, The American Naturalist.
[91] L. Poorter,et al. Growth and carbon partitioning of tropical tree seedlings in contrasting light environments. , 1998 .
[92] J. Andel,et al. Ecological significance of variability in growth rate and plant productivity , 1990 .
[93] H. Lambers,et al. Growth and carbon economy of a fast-growing and a slow-growing grass species as dependent on nitrate supply , 1995, Plant and Soil.
[94] R. Schmid,et al. Longevity of needle fascicles of Pinus longaeva (Bristlecone pine) and other North American pines , 1981, Oecologia.
[95] C. Monk. AN ECOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF EVERGREENNESS , 1966 .
[96] P. Reich,et al. Relative growth rate in relation to physiological and morphological traits for northern hardwood tree seedlings: species, light environment and ontogenetic considerations , 1993, Oecologia.
[97] Peter Ryser,et al. The importance of tissue density for growth and life span of leaves and roots: a comparison of five ecologically contrasting grasses , 1996 .
[98] E. Small. Photosynthetic rates in relation to nitrogen recycling as an adaptation to nutrient deficiency in peat bog plants , 1972 .
[99] R. Verburg,et al. Inherent allocation patterns and potential growth rates of herbaceous climbing plants , 1996, Plant and Soil.
[100] F. Stuart Chapin,et al. Evolution of Suites of Traits in Response to Environmental Stress , 1993, The American Naturalist.
[101] P. Reich,et al. From tropics to tundra: global convergence in plant functioning. , 1997, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[102] Gert B. Eijkel,et al. Differences in relative growth rate in 11 grasses correlate with differences in chemical composition as determined by pyrolysis mass spectrometry , 1992, Oecologia.
[103] E. Garnier,et al. Specific leaf area and leaf nitrogen concentration in annual and perennial grass species growing in Mediterranean old-fields , 1997, Oecologia.
[104] C.J.T. Spitters,et al. Simulation of competition for light and water in crop-weed associations , 1983 .
[105] J. Verkleij,et al. Cadmium tolerance and co-tolerance in Silene vulgaris (Moench.) Garcke [=S. cucubalus (L.) Wib.]. , 1989, The New phytologist.
[106] K. Killingbeck. Nutrients in Senesced Leaves: Keys to the Search for Potential Resorption and Resorption Proficiency , 1996 .
[107] W. Corré. GROWTH AND MORPHOGENESIS OF SUN AND SHADE PLANTS I. THE INFLUENCE OF LIGHT INTENSITY , 1983 .
[108] R. Hunt,et al. Components of relative growth rate and their interrelations in 59 temperate plant species , 1997 .
[109] E. Nevo,et al. Differential selection of growth rate‐related traits in wild barley, Hordeum spontaneum, in contrasting greenhouse nutrient environments , 2003, Journal of evolutionary biology.
[110] F. Woodward. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF INTERSPECIFIC DIFFERENCES IN SPECIFIC LEAF AREA TO THE GROWTH OF SELECTED HERBACEOUS SPECIES FROM DIFFERENT ALTITUDES , 1983 .
[111] Bill Shipley,et al. Net assimilation rate, specific leaf area and leaf mass ratio: which is most closely correlated with relative growth rate? A meta‐analysis , 2006 .
[112] E. Garnier,et al. Carbon and nitrogen content of congeneric annual and perennial grass species: relationships with growth , 1994 .
[113] K. Kitajima. Relative importance of photosynthetic traits and allocation patterns as correlates of seedling shade tolerance of 13 tropical trees , 1994, Oecologia.
[114] Eric Garnier,et al. PLANT FUNCTIONAL MARKERS CAPTURE ECOSYSTEM PROPERTIES DURING SECONDARY SUCCESSION , 2004 .
[115] M. Caldwell,et al. EXPLOITATION OF SPRINGTIME EPHEMERAL N PULSES BY SIXGREAT BASIN PLANT SPECIES , 1997 .
[116] E. Garnier. Growth analysis of congeneric annual and perennial grass species , 1992 .
[117] Ian J. Wright,et al. Differences in seedling growth behaviour among species: trait correlations across species, and trait shifts along nutrient compared to rainfall gradients , 1999 .
[118] J. Tsialtas,et al. Leaf Physiological Traits and their Importance for Species Success in a Mediterranean Grassland , 2004, Photosynthetica.
[119] L. Boorman. Some plant growth patterns in relation to the sand dune habitat. , 1982 .
[120] M. Westoby,et al. ECOLOGICAL STRATEGIES : Some Leading Dimensions of Variation Between Species , 2002 .
[121] A. Biere. Intra-specific variation in relative growth rate: impact on competitive ability and performance of Lychnis flos-cuculi in habitats differing in soil fertility , 1996, Plant and Soil.
[122] R. L. Eckstein,et al. Above-ground growth and nutrient use by plants in a subarctic environment : Effects of habitat, life-form and species , 1997 .
[123] R. Hunt,et al. Plant Growth Curves-the Functional Approach to Plant Growth Analysis. , 1983 .