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AOBPreview published online on July 11, 2008

Annals of Botany, doi:10.1093/aob/mcn119
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© The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Adaptation of Rhizome Connections in Drylands: Increasing Tolerance of Clones to Wind Erosion

Fei-Hai Yu1, Ning Wang1,2, Wei-Ming He1, Yu Chu1 and Ming Dong1,*

1 State Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Environmental Change, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100093, China
2 College of Life Sciences, Jinggangshan University, Ji'an 343009, China

* For correspondence. Email dongming{at}ibcas.ac.cn

Received: 29 February 2008    Returned for revision: 28 May 2008    Accepted: 16 June 2008   

Background and Aims: Wind erosion is a severe stress for plants in drylands, but the mechanisms by which plants withstand erosion remain largely unknown. Here, the hypothesis is tested that maintaining rhizome connections helps plants to tolerate erosion.

Methods: Five transects were established across an inland dune in Inner Mongolia, China, and measurements were made of leaf number, biomass per ramet and rhizome depth of Psammochloa villosa in 45 plots. In 40 x 40 cm plots of P. villosa on another dune, the top 15 or 30 cm of sand was removed for 1·5 or 3 months to simulate short- and long-term moderate and severe erosion, respectively, with untreated plots as controls, and the rhizomes at the edges of half of the plots were severed to mimic loss of rhizome connections.

Key Results: Leaf number and biomass per ramet showed quadric relationships with rhizome depth; when rhizomes were exposed to the air, the associated ramets either died or became very weak. Ramet number, leaf number and biomass per plot decreased with increasing erosion severity. Rhizome connections did not affect these traits under control or short-term erosion, but increased them under long-term erosion.

Conclusions: Rhizome connections alleviated the negative effects of erosion on P. villosa, very likely because the erosion-stressed ramets received water and/or photosynthates translocated from those connected ramets that were not subject to erosion. This study provides the first evidence that maintaining rhizome connections helps plants to tolerate erosion in drylands.

Key words: Clonal integration, inland-dune grass, Psammochloa villosa, resource sharing, rhizome severing, wind erosion


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