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Journal ArticleDOI

Vegetation and soil and plant chemistry on ultramafic rocks in the tropical Far East

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TLDR
The distinct ‘maquis’ vegetation of New Caledonia, and probably ultramafic scrub elsewhere, has evolved in relation to not only the soil chemical factors just listed but also periodic fire and varying degrees of drought.
Abstract
The tropical Far East has many outcrops of ultramafic rock including very large areas in Sulawesi (c. 8000 km2) and New Caledonia (c. 5500 km2). The outcrops occur under several different climates, and give rise to a range of soils, the characteristics of which are reviewed. The vegetation on them is very varied. Under the same climate one can find grassland, scrub, and both short and tall rain forests. The variation in species richness on the ultramafics is difficult to explain. The degree of endemism varies too; it is probably less dependent on soil characteristics than on historical factors. The causes of the various unusual types of vegetation on ultramafic outcrops are discussed. It is possible that the somewhat dwarfed forests result from a shortage of one or more major nutrients or from very high soil Mg/Ca quotients or high Ni concentrations. The distinct ‘maquis’ vegetation of New Caledonia, and probably ultramafic scrub elsewhere, has evolved in relation to not only the soil chemical factors just listed but also periodic fire and varying degrees of drought. Fires are certainly more important than was once thought and the adverse soil factors may have a role in delaying recolonisation. The plant chemistry is notable for the presence of species which hyperaccumulate certain elements, notably Ni. This phenomenon is discussed in relation to its ecological importance, which may be protection of the hyperaccumulators against herbivores. The need for a conservation policy for the ultramafic areas is stressed, and mention is made of the restoration work on sites damaged by nickel mining in New Caledonia.

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Cadmium toxicity in plants.

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Ultramafic nickel laterites in Indonesia (Sulawesi, Halmahera): mining, nickel hyperaccumulators and opportunities for phytomining

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a phytomining operation using hyperaccumulators to extract residual nickel from stripped land in Sulawesi and Halmahera islands in Indonesia.
References
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OtherDOI

Tectonics of the Indonesian region

TL;DR: The plate-tectonic evolution of a region can be deduced by following the as-sumptions that subduction zones are characterized by ophiolite, melange, wildflysch, and blueschist, that intermediate and silicic calc-alkaline igneous rocks form above Benioff zones, and that truncations of orogenic belts indicate rifting as mentioned in this paper.
Book

Tropical rain forests of the Far East

TL;DR: Tropical rain forests of the Far East forest structure animals in the forest the forest environment - climate seasonal cycles in plants and animals seed dispersal to seedling establishment growth of seedlings into trees the ecological basis of rain-forest silviculture growth rates, forest yields and biomass inorganic nutrients and their cycling the tropical rain forests as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flowering plants; origin and dispersal

TL;DR: In this article, the origin and dispersal of a plant is discussed in the context of origin and migration of a species of a genus called "Flowering Plants" in the Middle East.
Journal ArticleDOI

Free histidine as a metal chelator in plants that accumulate nickel

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that exposing hyperaccumu-lator species of Alyssum to nickel elicits a large and proportional increase in the levels of free histidine, which is shown to be coordinated with nickel in vivo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nickel: a micronutrient essential for higher plants

TL;DR: The observations that barley plants fail to complete their life cycle in the absence of Ni and addition of Ni to the growth medium completely alleviates deficiency symptoms in the maternal plants satisfies the essentiality criteria means Ni should be considered a micronutrient for cereals.
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