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Annals of Botany 72: 607-611, 1993
© 1993 Annals of Botany Company

Aluminium Toxicity as a Factor Limiting the Distribution of Allium ursinum (L.)

Maud E. Andersson

Department of Plant Ecology, Soil Ecology Group, Lund University, Östra Vallgatan 14, S-223 61 Lund, Sweden

Solution experiments and analyses of soil solutions from the field were made to elucidate whether the Al concentration in the soil water of dystric cambisols could be a factor restricting Allium ursinum to less acid soils. Two size classes of A. ursinum were exposed, for 4 weeks to a synthetic soil solution of pH 4·3 containing 0, 20, 40 and 70 µM Al, using a flowing solution culture system. An Al concentration of 20 µm, at a Ca/Al molar ratio of 12·5, was toxic to the plants, as shown by a cessation of root extension and slower root dry weight production. Compared to mature plants, seedlings developed Al toxicity symptoms after shorter exposures to Al and negative effects on the shoots were displayed at smaller Al concentrations in solution. The high sensitivity of this species to Al, and the maximum soil solution concentration of available Al present at the most acid sites that support A. ursinum, indicate that Al and the Ca/Al ratio may determined the field distribution.Copyright 1993, 1999 Academic Press

Allium ursinum, Al toxicity, growth, Ca/Al, developmental stage, flowing solution, soil solution, field distribution


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