Data di Pubblicazione:
2014
Abstract:
Aims In serpentinitic areas non-endemic plants suffer from
the serpentine syndrome, due to high Ni and Mg concentrations,
low nutrients and Ca/Mg ratio. We evaluated the
environment-soil-vegetation relationships in a xeric inneralpine
area (NW Italy), where the inhibited pedogenesis
should enhance parent material influences on vegetation.
Methods Site conditions, topsoil properties, plant associations
and species on and off serpentinite were statistically
associated (51 sites).
Results Serpentine soils had higher Mg and Ni concentrations,
but did not differ from non-serpentine ones in
nutrient contents. The 15 vegetation clusters often
showed substrate specificity. Two components of the
Canonical Analysis of Principal Coordinates, respectively
related to Mg and to Ni and heat load, identified
serpentine vegetation. Random Forests showed that several
species were positively correlated with Ni and/or
Ca/Mg or Mg, some were negatively associated with
high Ni, Mg excess affected only few species.
Considering only serpentine sites, nutrients and microclimate
were most important.
Conclusions Ni excess most often precludes the presence
of plant species on serpentinite, while an exclusion
due to Mg is rarer. Endemic species are mostly adapted
to both factors. Nutrient scarcity was not specific of
serpentine soils in the considered environment.
Considering only serpentine sites, nutrient and microclimatic
gradients drove vegetation variability.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
Ultramafic rocks; serpentinite; pedogenesis; Serpentine syndrome; soil fertility; Nickel
Elenco autori:
Michele D’Amico; Eleonora Bonifacio; Ermanno Zanini
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