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The above-ground coarse wood productivity of 104 Neotropical forest plots
Authors:Yadvinder Malhi  Timothy R Baker  Oliver L Phillips  Samuel Almeida  Esteban Alvarez  Luzmilla Arroyo  Jerome Chave  Claudia I Czimczik  Anthony Di Fiore  Niro Higuchi  Timothy J Killeen  Susan G Laurance  William F Laurance  Simon L Lewis  Lina María Mercado Montoya  Abel Monteagudo  David A Neill  Percy Núez Vargas  Sandra Patio  Nigel CA Pitman  Carlos Alberto Quesada  Rafael Salomo  Jos Natalino Macedo Silva  Armando Torres Lezama  Rodolfo Vsquez Martínez  John Terborgh  Barbara Vinceti  Jon Lloyd
Institution:School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh, Darwin Building, Mayfield Road, Edinburgh, UK,;Max-Planck-Institut für Biogeochemie, Postfach 100164, 07701 Jena, Germany,;Earth and Biosphere Institute, Geography, University of Leeds, UK,;Museu Paraense Emilio Goeldi, Belém, Brazil,;Equipo de Gestión Ambiental, Interconexión Eléctrica S.A. ISA., Medellín, Colombia,;Museo Noel Kempff Mercado, Santa Cruz, Bolivia,;Laboratoire Evolution et DiversitéBiologique, CNRS/UPS, Toulouse, France,;Department of Anthropology, New York University, New York, USA,;Institito National de Pesquisas Amazônicas, Manaus, Brazil,;Center for Applied Biodiversity Science, Conservation International, Washington, DC, USA;, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Panama,;Herbario Vargas, Universidad Nacional San Antonio Abad del Cusco, Cusco, Peru,;Proyecto Flora del Perú, Jardin Botanico de Missouri, Oxapampa, Perú,;Fundacion Jatun Sacha, Quito, Ecuador,;Center for Tropical Conservation, Duke University, Durham, USA,;Departamento de Ecologia, Universidade de Brasília, Brazil,;CIFOR, Tapajos, Brazil,;EMBRAPA Amazonia Oriental, Belém, Brazil,;INDEFOR, Facultad de Ciencias Forestales y Ambientale, Universidad de Los Andes, Mérida, Venezuela,;International Plant Genetic Resources Institute, Rome, Italy
Abstract:The net primary production of tropical forests and its partitioning between long‐lived carbon pools (wood) and shorter‐lived pools (leaves, fine roots) are of considerable importance in the global carbon cycle. However, these terms have only been studied at a handful of field sites, and with no consistent calculation methodology. Here we calculate above‐ground coarse wood carbon productivity for 104 forest plots in lowland New World humid tropical forests, using a consistent calculation methodology that incorporates corrections for spatial variations in tree‐size distributions and wood density, and for census interval length. Mean wood density is found to be lower in more productive forests. We estimate that above‐ground coarse wood productivity varies by more than a factor of three (between 1.5 and 5.5 Mg C ha?1 a?1) across the Neotropical plots, with a mean value of 3.1 Mg C ha?1 a?1. There appear to be no obvious relationships between wood productivity and rainfall, dry season length or sunshine, but there is some hint of increased productivity at lower temperatures. There is, however, also strong evidence for a positive relationship between wood productivity and soil fertility. Fertile soils tend to become more common towards the Andes and at slightly higher than average elevations, so the apparent temperature/productivity relationship is probably not a direct one. Coarse wood productivity accounts for only a fraction of overall tropical forest net primary productivity, but the available data indicate that it is approximately proportional to total above‐ground productivity. We speculate that the large variation in wood productivity is unlikely to directly imply an equivalent variation in gross primary production. Instead a shifting balance in carbon allocation between respiration, wood carbon and fine root production seems the more likely explanation.
Keywords:Amazonia  carbon  coarse wood productivity  GPP  growth  NPP  soil fertility  tropical forests
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