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      Performance, plasticity, and acclimation of the nonindigenous shrub Lonicera maackii (Caprifoliaceae) in contrasting light environments

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      Canadian Journal of Botany
      Canadian Science Publishing

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          Most cited references32

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          The Physiological Ecology of Plant Succession

          F A Bazzaz (1979)
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            Effects of Invasion by Lonicera tatarica L. On Herbs and Tree Seedlings in Four New England Forests

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              Ecophysiology of exotic and native shrubs in Southern Wisconsin

              We compared seasonal trends in photosynthesis of two naturalized exotic shrubs (Rhamnus cathartica and Lonicera X bella) and two native shrubs (Cornus racemosa and Prunus serotina) in open and understory habitats in southern Wisconsin. We examined the relationships between resource availability and leaf photosynthetic performance in these four species. All four species had similar relationships between leaf nitrogen (N) content and photosynthetic rate, but the species differed in absolute leaf N content and therefore in photosynthetic rates. Maximum daily photosynthetic rates of all species were significantly correlated with leaf N content in the open habitat, but not in the understory, where low light availability was the major limitation to photosynthesis. Extended leaf longevity was important in the forest understory because it allowed shrubs to take advantage of high light availability at times when the overstory canopy was leafless. Early leaf emergence was more important than late senescence: from 27% to 35% of the annual carbon gain of P. serotina, R. cathartica, and L. X bella occurred prior to leaf emergence of C. racemosa, the species with the shortest leaf life span. Extended leaf longevity of exotic shrubs may help explain their persistence in the understory habitat, but it contributed relatively less to their annual carbon gain in the open habitat.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Canadian Journal of Botany
                Can. J. Bot.
                Canadian Science Publishing
                0008-4026
                December 1995
                December 1995
                : 73
                : 12
                : 1953-1961
                Article
                10.1139/b95-208
                bf455ab0-1272-452d-8da5-22205c7b1adf
                © 1995

                http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/page/about/CorporateTextAndDataMining

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