You are what you eat: nutrient and water relations between mistletoes and hosts

Author:

Zhang Yun‐Bing12ORCID,Corrêa Scalon Marina3ORCID,Liu Jing‐Xin1ORCID,Song Xiao‐Yang1ORCID,Yang Da1ORCID,Zhang Yong‐Jiang4ORCID,Ellsworth David S.5ORCID,Zhang Jiao‐Lin16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CAS Key Laboratory of Tropical Forest Ecology Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences Menglun Mengla 666303 Yunnan China

2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences No. 19(A) Yuquan Road, Shijingshan District Beijing 100049 China

3. Programa de Pós‐graduação em Ecologia e Conservação Universidade Federal do Paraná Curitiba PR 81531‐990 Brazil

4. School of Biology and Ecology University of Maine Orono ME 04469 USA

5. Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment Western Sydney University Locked Bag 1797 Penrith NSW 2751 Australia

6. Yuanjiang Savanna Ecosystem Research Station Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences Yuanjiang Yunnan 653300 China

Abstract

SummaryMistletoes play important roles in biogeochemical cycles. Although many studies have compared nutrient concentrations between mistletoes and their hosts, no general patterns have been found and the nutrient uptake mechanisms in mistletoes have not been fully resolved.To address the water and nutrient relations in mistletoes compared with their hosts, we measured 11 nutrient elements, two isotope ratios and two leaf morphological traits for 11 mistletoe and 104 host species from four sites across a large environmental gradient in southwest China.Mistletoes had significantly higher phosphorus, potassium, and boron concentrations, nitrogen isotope ratio, and lower carbon isotope ratio (δ13C) indicative of lower water‐use efficiency than hosts, but other elements were similar to those in hosts. Sites explained most of the variation in the multidimensional trait space. With increasing host nitrogen concentration, both mistletoe δ13C and the difference between mistletoe and host δ13C increased, providing evidence to support the ‘nitrogen parasitism hypothesis’. Host nutrient concentrations were the best predictors for that of the mistletoe nutrient elements in most cases.Our results highlight the important roles of environmental conditions and host nutrient status in determining mistletoe nutrient pools, which together explain their trophic interactions with hosts in subtropical and tropical ecosystems.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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