Literature DB >> 26378309

Lianas always outperform tree seedlings regardless of soil nutrients: results from a long-term fertilization experiment.

Sarah C Pasquini, S Joseph Wright, Louis S Santiago.   

Abstract

Lianas are a prominent growth form in tropical forests, and there is compelling evidence that they are increasing in abundance throughout the Neotropics. While recent evidence shows that soil resources limit tree growth even in deep shade, the degree to which soil resources limit lianas in forest understories, where they coexist with trees for decades, remains unknown. Regardless, the physiological underpinnings of soil resource limitation in deeply shaded tropical habitats remain largely unexplored for either trees or lianas. Theory predicts that lianas should be more limited by soil resources than trees because they occupy the quick-return end of the "leaf economic spectrum," characterized by high rates of photosynthesis, high specific leaf area, short leaf life span, affinity to high-nutrient sites, and greater foliar nutrient concentrations. To address these issues, we asked whether soil resources (nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium), alone or in combination, applied experimentally for more than a decade would cause significant changes in the morphology or physiology of tree and liana seedlings in a lowland tropical forest. We found evidence for the first time that phosphorus limits the photosynthetic performance of both trees and lianas in deeply shaded understory habitats. More importantly, lianas always showed significantly greater photosynthetic capacity, quenching, and saturating light levels compared to trees across all treatments. We found little evidence for nutrient x growth form interactions, indicating that lianas were not disproportionately favored in nutrient-rich habitats. Tree and liana seedlings differed markedly for six key morphological traits, demonstrating that architectural differences occurred very early in ontogeny prior to lianas finding a trellis (all seedlings were self-supporting). Overall, our results do not support nutrient loading as a mechanism of increasing liana abundance in the Neotropics. Rather, our finding that lianas always outperform trees, in terms of photosynthetic processes and under contrasting rates of resource supply of macronutrients, will allow lianas to increase in abundance if disturbance and tree turnover rates are increasing in Neotropical forests as has been suggested.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26378309     DOI: 10.1890/14-1660.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  5 in total

1.  Traits, strategies, and niches of liana species in a tropical seasonal rainforest.

Authors:  Qi Liu; Frank J Sterck; Jiao-Lin Zhang; Arne Scheire; Evelien Konings; Min Cao; Li-Qing Sha; Lourens Poorter
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2021-05-23       Impact factor: 3.225

2.  Woody lianas increase in dominance and maintain compositional integrity across an Amazonian dam-induced fragmented landscape.

Authors:  Isabel L Jones; Carlos A Peres; Maíra Benchimol; Lynsey Bunnefeld; Daisy H Dent
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-10-17       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Long-term fertilization determines different metabolomic profiles and responses in saplings of three rainforest tree species with different adult canopy position.

Authors:  Albert Gargallo-Garriga; S Joseph Wright; Jordi Sardans; Míriam Pérez-Trujillo; Michal Oravec; Kristýna Večeřová; Otmar Urban; Marcos Fernández-Martínez; Teodor Parella; Josep Peñuelas
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-05-11       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Edge disturbance drives liana abundance increase and alteration of liana-host tree interactions in tropical forest fragments.

Authors:  Mason J Campbell; Will Edwards; Ainhoa Magrach; Mohammed Alamgir; Gabriel Porolak; D Mohandass; William F Laurance
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2018-04-02       Impact factor: 2.912

5.  Distribution Characteristics and Seasonal Variation of Soil Nutrients in the Mun River Basin, Thailand.

Authors:  Zhonghe Zhao; Gaohuan Liu; Qingsheng Liu; Chong Huang; He Li; Chunsheng Wu
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2018-08-23       Impact factor: 3.390

  5 in total

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