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HOW A RAINFOREST FUNCTIONS Dawn R. Black Questions 1. What factors influence productivity? 2. How does primary productivity in tropical rainforests compare to other biomes? 3. Where are most of the rapidly recycling minerals in tropical rainforests found? 4. What are the three general types of soils found in the tropics? Questions 5. What are the nutrient retention adaptations found in oligotrophic soils? 6. How do rainforest plants receive nitrogen? GPP & NPP/Biomass • Gross Primary Productivity (GPP) – The total amount of photosynthesis accomplished • Net Primary Productivity (NPP) – Amount of carbon added to the plant for growth and reproduction – Biomass + Detritus + Soil Organic Matter • Biomass – Total storage of organic carbon in plant tissues Factors Influencing Productivity • Adequate light (low light intensity limits understory species) • Moisture • CO2 levels • Soil minerals/nutrients (many soils old and mineral poor) Tropical vs. Other Ecosystems • GPP vastly higher in rainforests than in any other ecosystem • High rates of respiration (temperature stress) – 50-60% of GPP spent on maintenance • NPP higher than any terrestrial ecosystem Comparisons of NPP Net Primary Production (NPP) of the Major Biome Types Based on Biomass Harvestsa. Aboveground Belowground NPP Belowground Total NPP NPP (g m-2 yr-1) NPP (g m-2 yr-1) Biome (g m-2 yr-1) (% of total) 1,100 Tropical forests 1,400 0.44 2,500 600 Temperate forests 950 0.39 1,550 150 Boreal forests 230 0.39 380 500 Mediterranean shrublands 500 0.50 1,000 Tropical savannas and 540 grasslands 540 0.50 1,080 500 Temperate grasslands 250 0.67 750 100 Deserts 150 0.40 250 100 Arctic tundra 80 0.57 180 80 Crops 530 0.13 610 a Data from Saugier et al. (2001). NPP is expressed in units of dry mass. NPP estimated from harvests excludes NPP that is not available to harvest, due to consumption by herbivores, root exudation, transfer to mycorrhizae, and volatile emissions. Global Distribution of Carbon in Plant Biomass Global distribution of terrestrial biomes and their total carbon in plant biomassa. Area (106 km2) Total C pool (Pg C) 17.5 10.4 13.7 2.8 27.6 15.0 27.7 5.6 13.5 15.5 149.3 340 139 57 17 79 6 10 2 4 21.9 8.1 2.6 1.4 14.9 5.6 3.5 0.5 4.1 652 62.6 Total NPP (Pg C yr-1) Biome Tropical forests Temperate forests Boreal forests Mediterranean shrublands Tropical savannas and grasslands Temperate grasslands Deserts Arctic tundra Crops Ice Total a Data from Saugier et al. (2001). Biomass is expressed in units of carbon, assuming that plant biomass is 50% carbon. Productivity by Biome Productivity per day and per unit leaf areaa. Biome Tropical forests Temperate forests Boreal forests Mediterranean shrublands Tropical savannas and grasslands Temperate grasslands Deserts Arctic tundra Crops a Season lengthb (days) Daily NPP per Daily NPP per c ground area Total LAI leaf area (g m2 -1 (g m-2 d-1) (m2 m-2) d ) 365 6.8 6.0 1.14 250 6.2 6.0 1.03 150 2.5 3.5 0.72 200 5.0 2.0 2.50 200 5.4 5.0 1.08 150 5.0 3.5 1.43 100 2.5 1.0 2.50 100 1.8 1.0 1.80 200 3.1 4.0 0.76 Calculated from Table 5.3. NPP is expressed in units of dry mass. Estimated c Data from Gower (In press). b Tropical vs. Temperate PP • Huston (1994) – Productivity per unit time no greater in the tropics than in temperate zone (high PP due to length of growing season) • Kricher (1997) – Maybe plant tissue grows faster in tropics – Tropical species grew by an order of magnitude more than temperate species (red oak, red maple) when length of growing season was corrected for – Suggests that per tree productivity is considerably enhanced in the tropics Nutrient Cycling • Decomposition and subsequent recycling is the process by which materials move between the living and nonliving components of an ecosystem Decomposition • Fungi & bacteria – convert dead organic tissue back into simple inorganic compounds reavailable to plant root systems • Fungi immensely abundant in tropics • Mycelial mesh covers parts of some tropical forest floors Supporting Decomposers Slime molds Actinomycetes Algae Animals (vultures, arthropods, earthworms, invertebrates) Protozoans Leaching of Nutrients • Leaching – washing of essential minerals and other chemicals from leaves and soils by water Leaf adaptations • Drip tips (speed water runoff) • Protective cuticle with lipid-soluble secondary compounds that retard water loss & discourage herbivores and fungi Leaching of Soil • Rainfall increases H+ ions in soil (lowers pH), which bind to (-)-charged humus & clay • (+)-charged minerals (Ca, K) washed to deeper part of soil • Acidity of soil increased Rapid Recycling of Nutrients • Most of rapidly recycling minerals are in the biomass in the tropics • Decomposition & recycling of fallen parts occur with much greater speed in rainforests than in temperate forests (thin litter layer) – ~80% of total leaf matter in Amazon rainforest annually returned to soil (Klinge et al. 1975). Role of Mycorrhizae • Substitute for poorly developed root hairs • Mostly vesicular-arbuscular (VAM) – Aid in uptake of phosphorous • Some ectomycorrhizae, especially in poor soils – Aid in uptake of both minerals and water • VAM status of Dicorynia guianensis seedlings is critical factor controlling regeneration in primary tropical forest of French Guiana (Bereau et al., 1997) Soil Characteristics • Determined by several factors (Jenny 1941): – – – – – Climate Vegetation Topographic position Parent material Soil age Rainforest Soil Types Three general classifications of soils throughout humid tropics 1. Ultisols 2. Oxisols 3. Alfisols • • Comprise ~71% of land surface in humid tropics worldwide Only ~15% of moist tropical forests moderately fertile (in young soils of recent origin) Ultisols • Well-weathered • Minerals leached from upper parts of soils Oxisols • • • • Deeply weathered Old Acidic Found on well-drained soils of humid regions • Also found on Guianan Shield (common throughout global tropics) • Reddish color due to iron & aluminum oxides 1M Alfisols • Closer to neutral pH (still acidic) • Less overall leaching • Common in subhumid & semiarid tropics Mineral Cycling on Oligotrophic Soils • Up to 26% of roots on the surface • Root mats several cm thick can develop • Root mat & mycorrhizae directly absorb available minerals • 99.9% of Ca & P absorbed into root mat in Amazon • Presence of buttresses may allow roots to spread widely at surface, where they reclaim minerals Nutrient Retention Adaptations • Surface roots/mats • Apogeotropic roots – roots grow upward from soil onto stems of neighboring trees, absorb nutrients leached from trees from throughfall • Arrested litter – epiphytes & understory plants catch litter from canopy • Canopy leaves – algae & lichens on leaves absorb nutrients from rainfall and trap on leaf Nitrogen Fixation • Legumes & Rhizobium – abundant in biomass & biodiversity in tropics, take up gaseous N from atmosphere & convert to nitrate • Certain epiphytic lichens fix nitrogen • Leaf-surface microbes & liverworts may facilitate uptake of gaseous nitrogen • Termites – N-fixation due to activities of microbes in termite guts Rainforest Gaps • Microclimates dependent on gap size – Affects light, moisture, & wind conditions • Treefalls are normal part of rainforest function, peak in rainy season • Creates heterogeneous forest Gap-Dependent Pioneer Species • Produce an abundance of small seeds dispersed by bats or birds • Seeds capable of long dormancy periods • Different growth patterns among pioneers may explain coexistence of so many different species in rainforest ecosystems Forest Demographics • Forest turnover varies with species & region – La Selva, Costa Rica ~118 years – Cocha Cashu, Peru 63 years – Manaus, Brazil 82-89 years Disturbance & Ecological Succession • Jungle = early succession in tropics – High species richness – Highly variable from site to site • Early succession – Colonizers – Small in stature, grow fast, produce many-seeded fruits • Late succession – Equilibrium species – Larger, grow more slowly, fewer seeds per fruit, persist in closed canopy • Can take >500 years to reach equilibrium Answers 1. What factors influence productivity? Light levels, moisture, CO2 levels, soil minerals/nutrients 2. How does primary productivity in tropical rainforests compare to other biomes? Both GPP & NPP are higher than other biomes Answers (cont.) 3. Where are most of the rapidly recycling minerals in tropical rainforests found? In the plant biomass 4. What are the three general types of soils found in the tropics? Ultisols, Oxisols, Alfisols Answers (cont.) 5. What are the nutrient retention adaptations found in oligotrophic soils? Surface roots/mats, apogeotropic roots, arrested litter, algae/lichens on leaves 6. How do rainforest plants receive nitrogen? Legumes & Rhizobium, epiphytic lichens, leaf-surface microbes/liverworts, termites Roggy et al. (1999) • Study of plant N nutrition in legumes & pioneer species at Piste de St Elie in the ECEREX research area, French Guiana • Used δ15N method to estimate nitrogen input by N2-fixing legumes to natural rainforest Roggy et al. (1999) • Results – N2-fixing legumes contributed 136 t ha-1 to total above-ground plant biomass – N2-fixation estimated to be 7 kg ha-1 y -1 – δ15N of non- N2-fixing plants could be related to soil nitrogen availability • Could be used as indicator of nitrogen-cycling efficiency in rain forests Chave et al. (2001) • Biomass study • 2 study sites – Nouragues Research Station (100 km inland) – Piste de Saint-Elie Research Station (coastal rain forest Chave et al. (2001) • Results – Significant spatial variability of biomass at fine-scale resolution • Illustration of disturbance-driven, mosaic-like pattern in old-growth forest – Biomass accumulation of 3.2 Mg ha-1 y -1 & 2.8 Mg ha-1 y -1, which agrees with literature NPP of 2-4 Mg ha-1 y –1 (Phillips et al., 1998) -Variability of biomass correlated with canopy gap openings Granier et al. (1996) • Transpiration of natural rainforest & its dependence on climatic factors • Objectives: – Analyze transpiration at tree level through sap flow measurements performed on several major species growing in their natural environment – At stand level, analyze dependence of transpiration to climatic factors, by scaling up allowing calculation of stand. Granier et al. (1996) • Dependent Factors – Late stage species (high flow rates) – Pioneer species (low flow rates) • Crown Status – Codominant trees exhibited lower flow rates than dominant trees of same species • Sap flow showed remarkable concordance with variations of air vapor pressure deficit Literature Cited • • • • • • • • • • Bazzaz, F.A. 1984. Dynamics of wet tropical forests and their species strategies. In E. Medina, H.A. Mooney, and C. Vazquez-Yanes (eds). Physiological ecology of plants of the wet tropics. Junk, Dordrecht, pp. 233-243. Bereau, M., E. Louisanna, and J. Garbaye. 1997. Effect of endomycorrhizas and nematodes on the growth of seedlings of Dicoryniaguianensis Amshoff, a tree species of the tropical rain forest in French Guiana. Annales des Sciences Forestieres 54: 271-277. Chave, J., B. Riéra, M-A. Dubois. 2001. Estimation of biomass in a neotropical forest of French Guiana: spatial and temporal variability. Journal of Tropical Ecology 17: 79-96. Granier, A., R. Huc, S.T. Barigah. 1996. Transpiration of natural rain forest and its dependence on climatic factors. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 78:19-29. Huston, M.A. 1994. Biological diversity: the coexistence of species on changing landscapes. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. Kricher, J. 1997. A Neotropical Companion: An Introduction to the Animals, Plants, & Ecosystems of the New World Tropics. 2nd ed. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. Lescure, J-P. and R. Boulet. 1985. Relationship between soil and vegetation in a tropical rain forest in French Guiana. Biotropica 17: 155-164. Phillips, O. L., Y. Malhi, N. Higuchi, W.F. Laurance, P.V. Núñez, R.M. Vásquez, S.G. Laurence, L.V. Ferreira, M. Stern, S. Brown, & J. Grace. 1998. Changes in the carbon balance of tropical forests: evidence from longterm plots. Science 282:439-442. Roggy, J.C., M.F. Prévost, F. Gourbiere, H. Casabianca, J. Garbaye, and A.M. Domenach. 1999. Leaf natural 15N abundance and total N concentration as potential indicators of plant N nutrition in legumes and pioneer species in a rain forest of French Guiana. Oecologia 120: 171-182. Turnbull, M.H., S. Schmidt, P.D. Erskine, S. Richards, G.R. Stewart, M.A. Topa, P.T. Rygiewicz, and J.R. Cumming. 1996. Root adaptation and nitrogen source acquisition in ecosystems. Tree Physiology 16: 11-12, 941-948.