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Fossil leaf economics quantified: calibration, Eocene case study, and implications

Citation

Peter Wilf, Kirk R Johnson, Christopher H Lusk, Gregory J Jordan, Barbara Cariglino, Asher D Cutter, Phyllis D Coley, Dana L Royer, Ulo Niinemets, Mark Westoby, Lawren Sack, Fernando Valladares, Conrad C Labandeira, Matthew B Palmer, Angela T Moles, and Ian J Wright, Fossil leaf economics quantified: calibration, Eocene case study, and implications: .

Summary

Leaf mass per area (MA) is a central ecological trait that is intercorrelated with leaf life span, photosynthetic rate, nutrient concentration, and palatability to herbivores. These coordinated variables form a globally convergent leaf economics spectrum, which represents a general continuum running from rapid resource acquisition to maximized resource retention. Leaf economics are little studied in ancient ecosystems because they cannot be directly measured from leaf fossils. Here we use a large extant data set (65 sites; 667 species-site pairs) to develop a new, easily measured scaling relationship between petiole width and leaf mass, normalized for leaf area; this enables MA estimation for fossil leaves from petiole width and leaf [...]

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  • Upper Colorado River Basin

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From Source - Mendeley RIS export <br> On - Tue May 10 12:08:09 CDT 2011

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Title Citation Fossil leaf economics quantified: calibration, Eocene case study, and implications

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