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SENSITIVITY
OF WATER TUPELO (NYSSA AQUATICA) AND BALD CYPRESS (TAXODIUM
DISTICHUM) SEEDLINGS TO MANGANESE ENRICHMENT UNDER WATER-SATURATED
CONDITIONS
KENNETH
W. McLEOD* and THOMAS G. ClRAVOLO
Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, University of Georgia, P.O. Drawer
E, Aiken, South Carolina 29802, USA (Received 27 September 2002; Accepted
27 March 2003)
Abstract-In
anaerobic soils of wetlands, Mn is highly available to plants because
of the decreasing redox potential and pH of flooded soil. When growing
adjacent to each another in wetland forests, water tupelo (Nyssa aquatica
L.) had 10 times greater leaf manganese concentration than bald cypress
(Taxodium distichum [L.] Richard). This interspecific difference
was examined over a range of manganese-enriched soil conditions in a greenhouse
experiment. Water tupelo and bald cypress seedlings were grown in fertilized
potting soil enriched with 0, 40, SO, 160, 240, 320, and 400 mg Mn/L of
soil and kept at saturated to slightly flooded conditions. Leaf Mn concentration
was greater in water tupelo than bald cypress for all but the highest
Mn addition treatment. Growth of water tupelo seedlings was adversely
affected in treatments greater than 160 mg Mn/L. Total biomass of water
tupelo in the highest Mn treatment was less than 50% of the control. At
low levels of added Mn, bald cypress was able to restrict uptake of Mn
at the roots with resulting low leaf Mn concentrations. Once that root
restriction was exceeded, Mn concentration in bald cypress leaves increased
greatly with treatment; that is, the highest treatment was 40 times greater
than control (4,603 vs 100 fl,g/ g, respectively), but biomass of bald
cypress was unaffected by manganese additions. Bald cypress, a tree that
does not naturally accumulate manganese, does so under manganese-enriched
conditions and without biomass reduction in contrast to water tupelo,
which is severely affected by higher soil Mn concentrations. Thus, bald
cypress would be less affected by increased manganese availability in
swamps receiving acidic inputs such as acid mine drainage, acid rain,
or oxidization of pyritic soils.
Keywords-Taxodium
distichum, Nyssa aquatica, Manganese, Growth, Biomass
SREL Reprint
#2713
McLeod, K.
W. and T. G. Ciravolo. 2003. Sensitivity of water tupelo (Nyssa aquatica)
and bald cypress (Taxodium distichum) seedlings to manganese
enrichment under water-saturated conditions. Environmental Toxicology
and Chemistry 22:2948-2951.
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