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Title: | Biome-specific effects of nitrogen and phosphorus on the photosynthetic characteristics of trees at a forest-savanna boundary in Cameroon |
Authors: | null, Tomas Ishida, Francoise Yoko Feldpausch, Ted R. Grace, John Meir, Patrick W. Saiz, Gustavo Séné, Olivier Schrodt, Franziska Sonké, Bonaventure Taedoumg, Hermann E. Veenendaal, Elmar M. Lewis, Simon L. Lloyd, Jon |
Keywords: | Biome Concentration (composition) Ecophysiology Ecotone Global Change Nitrogen Nutrient Dynamics Phosphorus Photosynthesis Rainforest Savanna Tropical Environment Woody Plant Cameroon Nitrogen Phosphorus Ribulose-bisphosphate Carboxylase Africa Biodiversity Cameroon Ecosystem Electron Transport Forest Grassland Metabolism Photosynthesis Physiology Plant Leaf Species Difference Tree Tropic Climate Africa Biodiversity Cameroon Ecosystem Electron Transport Forests Grassland Nitrogen Phosphorus Photosynthesis Plant Leaves Ribulose-bisphosphate Carboxylase Species Specificity Trees Tropical Climate |
Issue Date: | 2015 |
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: | Oecologia |
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: | Volume 178, Número 3, Pags. 659-672 |
Abstract: | Photosynthesis/nutrient relationships of proximally growing forest and savanna trees were determined in an ecotonal region of Cameroon (Africa). Although area-based foliar N concentrations were typically lower for savanna trees, there was no difference in photosynthetic rates between the two vegetation formation types. Opposite to N, area-based P concentrations were—on average—slightly lower for forest trees; a dependency of photosynthetic characteristics on foliar P was only evident for savanna trees. Thus savanna trees use N more efficiently than their forest counterparts, but only in the presence of relatively high foliar P. Along with some other recent studies, these results suggest that both N and P are important modulators of woody tropical plant photosynthetic capacities, influencing photosynthetic metabolism in different ways that are also biome specific. Attempts to find simple unifying equations to describe woody tropical vegetation photosynthesis-nutrient relationships are likely to meet with failure, with ecophysiological distinctions between forest and savanna requiring acknowledgement. © 2015, The Author(s). |
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: | 10.1007/s00442-015-3250-5 |
Appears in Collections: | Artigos |
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