Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/14899
Título: Basin-wide variations in Amazon forest structure and function are mediated by both soils and climate
Autor: Quesada, Carlos Alberto
Phillips, Oliver L.
Schwarz, Michael
Czimczik, Claudia I.
Baker, Timothy R.
Patiño, Sandra
Fyllas, Nikolaos M.
Hodnett, Martin G.
Herrera, Rafael A.
Almeida, Samuel Miranda
Alvarez, Esteban
Arneth, Almuth
Arroyo, Luzmila P.
Chao, Kuo Jung
Dezzeo, Nelda
Erwin, Terry L.
Di Fiore, Anthony
Higuchi, Niro
Honorio Coronado, Euridice N.
Jiménez, E. M.
Killeen, Timothy J.
Lezama, Armando Torres
Lloyd, Gareth
Lopez-Gonzalez, Gabriela
Luizão, Flávio Jesus
Malhi, Yadvinder Singh
Monteagudo, Abel Lorenzo
Neill, David A.
Núñez-Vargas, Percy
Paiva, Romilda Q.
Peacock, Julie
Peñuela, María Cristina
Peña-Cruz, Antonio
Pitman, Nigel C.A.
Priante-Filho, Nicolau
Prieto, Adriana
Ramírez, Hirma
Rudas, Agustín
Salomão, Rafael Paiva
Santos, Alexandre J.B.
Schmerler, Jens
Silva, Natalino
Silveira, Marcos
Vásquez, Rodolfo V.
Guimarães Vieira, Ima Cèlia
Terborgh, John W.
Lloyd, Jon
Palavras-chave: Forest Dynamics
Growth Rate
Ion Exchange
Phosphorus
Phytomass
Potassium
Soil Chemistry
Soil Fertility
Soil Quality
Time-scale
Amazon Basin
Data do documento: 2012
Revista: Biogeosciences
É parte de: Volume 9, Número 6, Pags. 2203-2246
Abstract: Forest structure and dynamics vary across the Amazon Basin in an east-west gradient coincident with variations in soil fertility and geology. This has resulted in the hypothesis that soil fertility may play an important role in explaining Basin-wide variations in forest biomass, growth and stem turnover rates. Soil samples were collected in a total of 59 different forest plots across the Amazon Basin and analysed for exchangeable cations, carbon, nitrogen and pH, with several phosphorus fractions of likely different plant availability also quantified. Physical properties were additionally examined and an index of soil physical quality developed. Bivariate relationships of soil and climatic properties with above-ground wood productivity, stand-level tree turnover rates, above-ground wood biomass and wood density were first examined with multivariate regression models then applied. Both forms of analysis were undertaken with and without considerations regarding the underlying spatial structure of the dataset. Despite the presence of autocorrelated spatial structures complicating many analyses, forest structure and dynamics were found to be strongly and quantitatively related to edaphic as well as climatic conditions. Basin-wide differences in stand-level turnover rates are mostly influenced by soil physical properties with variations in rates of coarse wood production mostly related to soil phosphorus status. Total soil P was a better predictor of wood production rates than any of the fractionated organic- or inorganic-P pools. This suggests that it is not only the immediately available P forms, but probably the entire soil phosphorus pool that is interacting with forest growth on longer timescales. A role for soil potassium in modulating Amazon forest dynamics through its effects on stand-level wood density was also detected. Taking this into account, otherwise enigmatic variations in stand-level biomass across the Basin were then accounted for through the interacting effects of soil physical and chemical properties with climate. A hypothesis of self-maintaining forest dynamic feedback mechanisms initiated by edaphic conditions is proposed. It is further suggested that this is a major factor determining endogenous disturbance levels, species composition, and forest productivity across the Amazon Basin. © 2012 Author(s). CC Attribution 3.0 License.
DOI: 10.5194/bg-9-2203-2012
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