Résumé :
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A conceptual model of resource acquisition and allocation within a generalized, individual plant growing vegetatively in competition with others is presented. The model considers C and N acquisition, synthesis of assimilates and their transport and partitioning, growth of new tissues, reserve formation and recycling, and losses due to root exudation and respiration. These processes are regulated by the relative size of the C and N substrate pools in shoot and roots, in relation to meristematic sink strength. Translocation and allocation patterns are represented according to the Minchin phloem transport model, The current model is used to consider the impact of competition on resource acquisition and allocation, first by considering a plant growing in isolation and its response to manipulation of light, CO, and N supplies. Secondly, competitive plants are introduced and the direct effects on plant responses in terms of resource depletion are considered separately from indirect effects such as potential changes in the quality of resources available (e, g, light quality or soil N sources), In the past, many studies of plant competition have not established the importance of these indirect effects because they have not established all the processes involved in competition. This model can be used to interpret responses of whole plants to their neighbours in terms of the relative importance of both the direct and indirect effects of competition.
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