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Integrating Stand and Soil Properties to Understand Foliar Nutrient Dynamics during Forest Succession Following Slash-and-Burn Agriculture in the Bolivian Amazon

Secondary forests cover large areas of the tropics and play an important role in the global carbon cycle. During secondary forest succession, simultaneous changes occur among stand structural attributes, soil properties, and species composition. Most studies classify tree species into categories based on their regeneration requirements. We use a high-resolution secondary forest chronosequence to assign trees to a continuous gradient in species successional status assigned according to their distribution across the chronosequence. Species successional status, not stand age or differences in stand structure or soil properties, was found to be the best predictor of leaf trait variation. Foliar δ(13)C had a significant positive relationship with species successional status, indicating changes in foliar physiology related to growth and competitive strategy, but was not correlated with stand age, whereas soil δ(13)C dynamics were largely constrained by plant species composition. Foliar δ(15)N had a significant negative correlation with both stand age and species successional status, - most likely resulting from a large initial biomass-burning enrichment in soil (15)N and (13)C and not closure of the nitrogen cycle. Foliar %C was neither correlated with stand age nor species successional status but was found to display significant phylogenetic signal. Results from this study are relevant to understanding the dynamics of tree species growth and competition during forest succession and highlight possibilities of, and potentially confounding signals affecting, the utility of leaf traits to understand community and species dynamics during secondary forest succession.
- Carnegie Institution for Science United States
- Wageningen University & Research Netherlands
- University of California, Berkeley United States
- Universidad Amazonica de Pando Bolivia
- Carnegie Institution for Science United States
northeastern costa-rica, Plant Science, Forests, land-use change, Soil, Spatial and Landscape Ecology, Community Assembly, Biomass, Physiological Ecology, Plant Growth and Development, Ecology, Q, R, Forestry, Agriculture, Soil Ecology, Trophic Interactions, n-p ratios, Community Ecology, Medicine, brazilian amazon, carbon-isotope discrimination, Research Article, 570, Bolivia, secondary forest, Ecological Metrics, Science, Biomass (Ecology), tropical rain-forests, Carbon Cycle, Plant-Environment Interactions, below-ground carbon, Terrestrial Ecology, Biology, organic-matter, Ecosystem, 580, Productivity (Ecology), n-15 natural-abundance, Plant Ecology, Restoration Ecology, Species Diversity, Carbon, Species Interactions, Geochemistry, Earth Sciences, Population Ecology
northeastern costa-rica, Plant Science, Forests, land-use change, Soil, Spatial and Landscape Ecology, Community Assembly, Biomass, Physiological Ecology, Plant Growth and Development, Ecology, Q, R, Forestry, Agriculture, Soil Ecology, Trophic Interactions, n-p ratios, Community Ecology, Medicine, brazilian amazon, carbon-isotope discrimination, Research Article, 570, Bolivia, secondary forest, Ecological Metrics, Science, Biomass (Ecology), tropical rain-forests, Carbon Cycle, Plant-Environment Interactions, below-ground carbon, Terrestrial Ecology, Biology, organic-matter, Ecosystem, 580, Productivity (Ecology), n-15 natural-abundance, Plant Ecology, Restoration Ecology, Species Diversity, Carbon, Species Interactions, Geochemistry, Earth Sciences, Population Ecology
citations This is an alternative to the "Influence" indicator, which also reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically).15 popularity This indicator reflects the "current" impact/attention (the "hype") of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network.Top 10% influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically).Average impulse This indicator reflects the initial momentum of an article directly after its publication, based on the underlying citation network.Top 10%
