Differential chemical allocation and plant adaptation: a Py-MS study of 24 species differing in relative growth rate

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Reference G.J. Niemann, J.B.M. Pureveen, G.B. Eijkel, H. Poorter and J.J. Boon, Differential chemical allocation and plant adaptation: a Py-MS study of 24 species differing in relative growth rate, Plant Soil 175, 275-289 (1995)

The chemical composition of leaves of 24 wild species differing in potential relative growth rate (RGR) was analysed by pyrolysis-mass spectrometry. The variation in RGR significantly correlated with differences in chemical composition: slow-growing species were richer in glucan-based polysaccharides and in C16:0 fatty acid, whereas fast growing ones contained more protein (other than those incorporated in cell walls) and chlorophyll, sterols and diglycerides. Other, apparently significant correlations, e.g. for pentose-based hemicellulose and for guaiacyl lignin appeared solely based on a group separation between mono- and dicotyledonous species.