| Literature DB >> 25802814 |
Raphaël Proulx1, Guillaume Rheault1, Laurianne Bonin1, Irene Torrecilla Roca1, Charles A Martin1, Louis Desrochers1, Ian Seiferling1.
Abstract
Aboveground production in terrestrial plant communities is commonly expressed in amount of carbon, or biomass, per unit surface. Alternatively, expressing production per unit volume allows the comparison of communities by their fundamental capacities in packing carbon. In this work we reanalyzed published data from more than 900 plant communities across nine ecosystems to show that standing dry biomass per unit volume (biomass packing) consistently averages around 1 kg/m(3) and rarely exceeds 5 kg/m(3) across ecosystem types. Furthermore, we examined how empirical relationships between aboveground production and plant species richness are modified when standing biomass is expressed per unit volume rather than surface. We propose that biomass packing emphasizes species coexistence mechanisms and may be an indicator of resource use efficiency in plant communities.Entities:
Keywords: Biodiversity; Ecosystem; Packing density; Plant geometry; Self-thinning; Species coexistence
Year: 2015 PMID: 25802814 PMCID: PMC4369330 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.849
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Ecosystems and plant communities (No. stands) from various sources reporting both total dry standing biomass per unit surface and mean height of canopy plants.
| Ecosystem | No. stands | Location | Sources |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cropland—Biofuel | 19 | USA | ( |
| Cropland—Corn | 13 | USA | ( |
| Forest—Tropical | 19 | Columbia, Cambodia, Thailand, | ( |
| Forest—Pacific (west-coast) | 45 | Canada | ( |
| Forest—Temperate | 174 | USA, Canada | ( |
| Forest—Boreal | 126 | Canada | ( |
| Grasslands | 53 | Canada | ( |
| Meadows—8, 16 & 60 species | 340 | Germany | ( |
| Wetlands | 182 | France, Canada | ( |
Notes.
Data are presented in Appendix 1.
Figure 1Standing dry biomass of plant communities in different ecosystems when biomass is expressed (A) per unit surface or (B) per unit volume.
Figure 2Relationship between species richness and dry standing biomass of plant communities in two herbaceous ecosystems when biomass is expressed (A) per unit surface or (B) per unit volume.
Figure 3Comparison of two methods of assessing the amount of standing vegetation in wetlands of the Lac St-Pierre (Québec, Canada).
The aboveground production of 42 plant communities is expressed in units of dry biomass (g/m2) or of occupied plant volume (m3/m2).