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Published online 9 August 2005
Published in J Environ Qual 34:1478-1489 (2005)
DOI: 10.2134/jeq2004.0454
© 2005 American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America
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Predicting Inter-Taxa Differences in Plant Uptake of Cesium-134/137

Neil J. Willeya,*, Shirong Tangb and Nicholas R. Wattc

a Centre for Research in Plant Science, University of the West of England, Frenchay, Bristol BS16 1QY, UK
b College of Environmental Science and Engineering, Guangzhou University, Jie Fang Road, Guangzhou 510405, Guangdong Province, P. R. China
c British Nuclear Group, Berkeley Centre, Berkeley, Gloucestershire, GL13 9PB, UK



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Fig. 1. Frequency distribution for residual maximum likelihood (REML) values of Cs concentrations in plants. Shading indicates five significant groupings identified using cluster analysis with a Euclidean distance of 7.5.

 


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Fig. 2. The phylogeny of residual maximum likelihood (REML) Cs values in flowering plants down to the ordinal level using the phylogeny of Soltis et al. (1999). Thickness of lines denotes average ANOVA values. The ANOVA values and number of replicates per Order are shown in brackets. Orders with unusually high and low uptake of Cs are shaded. Dashed lines = unsampled.

 


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Fig. 3. The average residual maximum likelihood (REML) Cs values across Grime's plant growth strategies based on 61 species. Letters A, D, and B are floristic elements: A, plants of disturbed conditions that maximize utilization of captured resources; D, dominant plants that maximize capture of resources; B, subordinates.

 





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