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Growth of Pouteria glomerata (Sapotaceae), a tree species from the Central Amazonian floodplain, under long-term flooding

To understand the occurrence of P. glomerata in the Amazonian várzea we investigated the morpho-physiological responses to long-term flooding. Seedlings of P. glomerata were subjected to two flooding treatments (partial and total) for six months. Following flooding treatments, we examined light-saturated photosynthesis (A), the potential quantum yield of photosystem II (inferred as the Fv/Fm ratio), height, number of leaves (NF), stem diameter at the base of the plant (DCC), leaf area and plant biomass. We found a decrease in gas exchange parameters and growth rates, whereas leaf damage increased with flooding. After six months of flooding, leaf area, and the total plant biomass as well as the biomass of the vegetative organs (leaf, stem and root) were lower in flooded seedlings than in control, non-flooded plants. As flooding level increased assimilated carbon was mainly allocated to stems. However, flooding treatments had no significant effect on specific leaf area, the root/shoot ratio and dry mass of roots. Totally submerged roots of flooded seedlings were strongly affected, showing to be the most critical condition for maintenance of physiological metabolism. P. glomerata was affected by long-term flooding. Thus, P. glomerata exhibited adjusts morpho-fisiological which makes it possible for this species to occur in the Amazon floodplain forest.

Photosynthetic assimilation; quantum efficiency of photosystem II; biomass; phenotypic plasticity


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