Variation in Canopy Litterfall Along a Precipitation and Soil Fertility Gradient in a Panamanian Lower Montane Forest |
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Authors: | Katherine D. Heineman Pedro Caballero Arturo Morris Carmen Velasquez Kiria Serrano Nelly Ramos Jonathan Gonzalez Luis Mayorga Marife D. Corre James W. Dalling |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Plant Biology and Program for Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL, U.S.A;2. Departamento de Biología, Universidad Autónoma de Chiriquí, David, Panama;3. Soil Science of Tropical and Subtropical Ecosystems, Büsgen Institute, Georg‐August‐University G?ttingen, G?ttingen, Germany;4. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Ancon, Panama |
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Abstract: | Fertilization experiments in tropical forests have shown that litterfall increases in response to the addition of one or more soil nutrients. However, the relationship between soil nutrient availability and litterfall is poorly defined along natural soil fertility gradients, especially in tropical montane forests. Here, we measured litterfall for two years in five lower montane 1‐ha plots spanning a soil fertility and precipitation gradient in lower montane forest at Fortuna, Panama. Litterfall was also measured in a concurrent nitrogen fertilization experiment at one site. Repeated‐measures ANOVA was used to test for site (or treatment), year, and season effects on vegetative, reproductive and total litterfall. We predicted that total litterfall, and the ratio of reproductive to leaf litterfall, would increase with nutrient availability along the fertility gradient, and in response to nitrogen addition. We found that total annual litterfall varied substantially among 1‐ha plots (4.78 Mg/ha/yr to 7.96 Mg/ha/yr), and all but the most aseasonal plot showed significant seasonality in litterfall. However, litterfall accumulation did not track soil nutrient availability; instead forest growing on relatively infertile soil, but dominated by an ectomycorrhizal tree species, had the highest total litterfall accumulation. In the fertilization plots, significantly more total litter fell in nitrogen addition relative to control plots, but this increase in response to nitrogen (13%) was small compared to variation observed among 1‐ha plots. These results suggest that while litterfall at Fortuna is nutrient‐limited, compositional and functional turnover along the fertility gradient obscure any direct relationship between soil resource availability and canopy productivity. |
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Keywords: | ectomycorrhizal trees environmental gradients fertilization experiment Fortuna Forest Reserve nutrient limitation tropical forest productivity tropical forest seasonality tropical montane forest |
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