Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/17445
Title: Higher tree transpiration due to road-associated edge effects in a tropical moist lowland forest
Authors: Kunert, Norbert
Aparecido, Luiza Maria Teóphilo
Higuchi, Niro
Santos, Joaquim dos
Trumbore, Susan Elizabeth
Keywords: Boundary Layer
Canopy
Community Composition
Ecophysiology
Edge Effect
Lowland Environment
Microclimate
Pavement
Relative Humidity
Road Construction
Sap Flow
Transpiration
Tropical Forest
Vapor Pressure
Water Use
Amazon Basin
Issue Date: 2015
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 213, Pags. 183-192
Abstract: Newly created forest edges have significant ecophysiological effects on bordering trees. We studied edge effects on microclimate and tree transpiration rates during wet and dry seasons along a 250. m transect spanning the edge of an unpaved road into an old growth tropical lowland forest in the Central Brazilian Amazon. Canopy openness decreased only minimal from the road (3.68%) towards the forest interior (1.69%). Vapor pressure deficit (measured at 2.2. m height above ground) was lower in the forest interior. The edge effect on microclimate penetrated deeper into the forest (>100. m) during the dry season compared to the wet season (<100. m). Overall, sap flux, and therefore transpiration rate, was 54% higher in trees adjacent to the road compared to forest interior trees. Higher transpiration rates at the forest edge can be explained by higher turbulences and energy exchange of the canopy boundary layer and by a shift in species composition to high water using secondary forest species 25 years after the road construction. Similar changes might be expected for other disturbances affecting local relative humidity and in situations that favor plants with water use traits differing from those found in the forest interior. © 2015 Elsevier B.V.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1016/j.agrformet.2015.06.009
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