Literature DB >> 29482149

Abiotic and biotic determinants of coarse woody productivity in temperate mixed forests.

Zuoqiang Yuan1, Arshad Ali2, Shaopeng Wang3, Antonio Gazol4, Robert Freckleton5, Xugao Wang1, Fei Lin1, Ji Ye1, Li Zhou1, Zhanqing Hao6, Michel Loreau7.   

Abstract

Forests play an important role in regulating the global carbon cycle. Yet, how abiotic (i.e. soil nutrients) and biotic (i.e. tree diversity, stand structure and initial biomass) factors simultaneously contribute to aboveground biomass (coarse woody) productivity, and how the relative importance of these factors changes over succession remain poorly studied. Coarse woody productivity (CWP) was estimated as the annual aboveground biomass gain of stems using 10-year census data in old growth and secondary forests (25-ha and 4.8-ha, respectively) in northeast China. Boosted regression tree (BRT) model was used to evaluate the relative contribution of multiple metrics of tree diversity (taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic diversity and trait composition as well as stand structure attributes), stand initial biomass and soil nutrients on productivity in the studied forests. Our results showed that community-weighted mean of leaf phosphorus content, initial stand biomass and soil nutrients were the three most important individual predictors for CWP in secondary forest. Instead, initial stand biomass, rather than diversity and functional trait composition (vegetation quality) was the most parsimonious predictor of CWP in old growth forest. By comparing the results from secondary and old growth forest, the summed relative contribution of trait composition and soil nutrients on productivity decreased as those of diversity indices and initial biomass increased, suggesting the stronger effect of diversity and vegetation quantity over time. Vegetation quantity, rather than diversity and soil nutrients, is the main driver of forest productivity in temperate mixed forest. Our results imply that diversity effect for productivity in natural forests may not be so important as often suggested, at least not during the later stage of forest succession. This finding suggests that as a change of the importance of different divers of productivity, the environmentally driven filtering decreases and competitively driven niche differentiation increases with forest succession.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Functional traits; Mass ratio; Niche complementarity; Soil nutrients; Succession; Vegetation quantity

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29482149     DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.02.125

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Total Environ        ISSN: 0048-9697            Impact factor:   7.963


  4 in total

1.  Assessing scale-dependent effects on Forest biomass productivity based on machine learning.

Authors:  Jingyuan He; Chunyu Fan; Yan Geng; Chunyu Zhang; Xiuhai Zhao; Klaus von Gadow
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2022-07-13       Impact factor: 3.167

2.  Temporal stability of aboveground biomass is governed by species asynchrony in temperate forests.

Authors:  Zuoqiang Yuan; Arshad Ali; Shaopeng Wang; Xugao Wang; Fei Lin; Yunyun Wang; Shuai Fang; Zhanqing Hao; Michel Loreau; Lin Jiang
Journal:  Ecol Indic       Date:  2019-08-24       Impact factor: 4.958

3.  Multiple abiotic and biotic pathways shape biomass demographic processes in temperate forests.

Authors:  Zuoqiang Yuan; Arshad Ali; Tommaso Jucker; Paloma Ruiz-Benito; Shaopeng Wang; Lin Jiang; Xugao Wang; Fei Lin; Ji Ye; Zhanqing Hao; Michel Loreau
Journal:  Ecology       Date:  2019-04-08       Impact factor: 5.499

4.  Mass-ratio and complementarity effects simultaneously drive aboveground biomass in temperate Quercus forests through stand structure.

Authors:  Wen-Qiang Gao; Xiang-Dong Lei; Dong-Li Gao; Yu-Tang Li
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2021-11-12       Impact factor: 2.912

  4 in total

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