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1 July 2011 Salinity stress modulates habitat selection in the clonal plant Aeluropus sinensis subjected to crude oil deposition
Wenjuan Ding, Jian Liu, Daqian Wu, Yue Wang, Cheinchi Chang, Renqing Wang
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Abstract

Environmental stresses and disturbances are common in terrestrial ecosystems. Clonal integration and foraging behavior are often, but not always, beneficial for clonal plants grown in heterogeneous stressful environments. In this study, clonal fragments of the clonal perennial herb, Aeluropus sinensis (Debeaux) Tzvel (Poaceae), were grown with stolons connected or severed at five salinity levels (0, 50, 100, 200, and 400 mmol L−1 NaCl). In each clonal fragment, the apical ramet was exposed to crude oil on the sediment surface while the basal ramet was not. We proposed three possible scenarios: growth of the apical ramet subjected to crude oil would be (1) enhanced, (2) limited, or (3) not affected by clonal integration. Results supported scenario (2). Responses to crude oil differed between plants grown at low and high salinity levels. For A. sinensis, at high salinity levels, clonal integration promoted habitat selection by decreasing biomass of apical parts to escape the oil polluted habitats and increasing clonal growth of basal parts to select the unpolluted habitats, while at low salinity levels, connection did not influence growth of the basal or apical parts. Salinity modulates the behavior of a clonal plant subjected to heterogeneous crude oil contamination, at least in A. sinensis.

Wenjuan Ding, Jian Liu, Daqian Wu, Yue Wang, Cheinchi Chang, and Renqing Wang "Salinity stress modulates habitat selection in the clonal plant Aeluropus sinensis subjected to crude oil deposition," The Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 138(3), 262-271, (1 July 2011). https://doi.org/10.3159/TORREY-D-11-00023.1
Received: 21 March 2011; Published: 1 July 2011
KEYWORDS
Aeluropus sinensis
clonal integration
crude oil contamination
foraging behavior
habitat selection
heterogeneous environments
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