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    Photosynthesis and successional status of seedlings in a tropical semideciduous rain forest in Nigeria

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    Authors
    Riddoch, I.
    Grace, J.
    Fasehun, F.E.
    Riddoch, B.
    Ladipo, D.O.
    Date Issued
    1991-06
    Language
    en
    Type
    Journal Article
    Review status
    Peer Review
    ISI journal
    Accessibility
    Limited Access
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Riddoch, I., Gracr, J., Fasehun, F.E., Riddoch, B. & Ladipo, D.O. (1991). Photosynthesis and successional status of seedlings in a tropical semi-deciduous rain forest in Nigeria. Journal of Ecology, 79, 491-503.
    Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101710
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.2307/2260728
    Abstract/Description
    (1) This study tests the hypothesis that photosynthetic performance of seedlings in a tropical forest depends on the successional status of the species. According to this hypothesis, pioneers display an enhanced capacity to utilize the high photon flux density associated with a gap. (2) Data were collected from nine species representing three ecological groupings: weeds of gaps, pioneer trees and climax trees. Pioneer trees had photosynthetic attributes similar to weeds. Compared to climax trees, both groups had higher stomatal conductances, higher light compensation points, higher rates of dark respiration, much higher mesophyll conductances, and often higher quantum efficiencies. (3) In a fluctuating light regime, there was no support for the hypothesis that species growing in shade show rapid stomatal responses to sunflecks, all species showed fluctuating rates of photosynthesis with little or no adjustment of stomata during the 20-min test.
    AGROVOC Keywords
    seedlings; tropical forests; weeds; trees; photosynthesis
    Subjects
    FORESTRY; WEEDS
    Countries
    Nigeria
    Regions
    Africa; Western Africa
    Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
    University of Edinburgh; University of Ibadan; University of Botswana; Forest Research Institute of Nigeria; International Institute of Tropical Agriculture
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    • IITA Journal Articles [4998]

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