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Newbery, DM; Alexander, IJ; Rother, JA. 1997. Phosphorus dynamics in a lowland African
rain forest: The influence of ectomycorrhizal trees. Ecol. Monogr. 67(3): 367-409.
Address:
DM Newbery; UNIV BERN; GEOBOT INST, ALTENBERGRAIN 21; BERN; SWITZERLAND;
CH-3013 BC
In the southern part of Korup National Park, Cameroon, nine replicate
plots (40 x 80 m) in forest with low abundances (5-15% of the
basal area of all trees greater than or equal to 30 cm gbh [girth
at breast height]; LEM) and nine with high abundances (45-68%;
HEM) of ectomycorrhizal caesalpiniaceous legumes were selected
from an earlier enumeration along an east-west 5-km transect.
The codominant caesalps in HEM plots were Microberlinia bisulcata,
Tetraberlinia bifoliolata, and T. moreliana, and ordination
showed the LEM and HEM plots to be floristically distinct. The
HEM plots lay in a large well-defined patch of these caesalps,
set within surrounding LEM forest. A further contrast to HEM
forest was achieved by selecting six LEM and six VLEM plots
(very low, approximate to 0% ectomycorrhizal trees) on a second
transect 12 km to the north. Korup has an annual rainfall of
5180 mm with one very distinct 3-mo dry season (December-February).
The soils are sandy, acidic, and very phosphorus poor. The aim
was to determine whether LEM and HEM plots differed in their
litter and soil phosphorus status and the characteristics of
their phosphorus cycles.On 13 occasions between August 1988
and September 1990, litter and soils in the surface root layer
and the mineral layer 5 cm below were sampled on the main transect
and analyzed for phosphorus fractions. This analysis distinguished
between inorganic and organic forms and provided various measures
of lability. Nitrogen and carbon contents, pH, and moisture
contents of each layer, depth of the root layer, and amounts
of litter (i.e., litter mass) and soil were the other main variables.
In a subset of plots, leaf litterfall was collected over the
period and analyzed for phosphorus and nitrogen, and two litter-bag
experiments in early wet seasons estimated rates of litter disappearance.
Root biomass and change with depth were estimated from pit samples
within the plots.HEM plots had slightly higher mean basal area
of trees than LEM plots (32.3 and 27.1 m(2)/ha, respectively)
and higher fine root (less than or equal to 5 mm diameter) biomasses
(519 and 364 g/m(2), 0-5 cm), but the same mean litter mass
(155 g/m(2)) and annual leaf litterfall (720 g/m(2)) and very
similar disappearance rates (1.82 g.m(-2).d(-1) on litterfall/mass
basis; t(1/2) of 53 d from litter bags). Litter mass (and litterfall)
reached a clear peak in the mid-dry season in both HEM and LEM
plots (slightly earlier in HEM), almost completely disappearing
by mid-wet season. The phosphorus concentrations in HEM falling
leaf litter was much greater than in LEM (801 and 676 mu g/g)
leading to greater inputs (1.79 and 1.35 mg.m(-2).d(-1)), while
for nitrogen the concentrations and inputs were very similar
(means 17.8 mg/g, 35.3 mg.m(-2).d(-1)). An important feature
was the marked peak in phosphorus (but not nitrogen) concentration
in litter in the HEM plots only in those years that did not
follow a mast fruiting.Depth of the root layer was greater in
the HEM than LEM plots (8.1 and 4.2 mm), as was carbon content
(5.5 and 4.0%), but bulk density was less (0.85 and 1.30 g/cm(3)).
Moisture contents, which tracked the seasons in all three layers,
were slightly higher in HEM than LEM, as were clay and silt
contents, but pH values were lower (4.19 and 4.59, root layer).
The relative differences in the eight soil phosphorus fractions
(resin-, bicarbonate- and NaOH-extractable, and chloroform-labile,
inorganic, and organic) plus residual and total phosphorus were
remarkably consistent between HEM and LEM plots. In the root
layer total phosphorus was much higher in HEM than LEM plots
(309 and 186 mu g/g, respectively) and likewise in the mineral
layer (192 and 119 mu g/g, respectively): HEM/LEM ratios of
approximate to 1.6 were maintained across nearly all fractions.
Covariance analysis indicated that the basal areas of LEM and
HEM plots could not account for the differences in phosphorus
concentrations.Different fractions followed different trends
with time, but these did not match seasons and showed, for the
more labile inorganic phosphorus fractions especially, a linear
decline over the study period. Interactions between forest type
and date (split-plot repeated-measures analysis of variance)
were rarely significant even though date itself invariably was.
In marked contrast, nitrogen fractions did not decline, and
labile organic nitrogen showed clear seasonal peaks. Differences
between the LEM forest on the two transects (two occasions in
common) were small and inconsistent, supporting the wider contrast.
with HEM plots. Principal components analysis of the phosphorus
and nitrogen fractions showed a strong discrimination between
LEM and HEM plots. Calculation with amounts of phosphorus in
the top 6 cm of the soil showed very similar patterns to the
concentrations.Large ectomycorrhizal trees appeared to have
increased the depth of the surface root layer, its phosphorus
content, the labile phosphorus fraction (notably its organic
component), and to have enhanced phosphorus cycling. The role
of ectomycorrhizas in this process is discussed. The decline
in labile phosphorus is explained by a phenological and climatic
ectomycorrhizal response (PACER) hypothesis that highlights
the relationship between phosphorus demand in mast fruiting
years and soil phosphorus concentrations. The importance of
this in adaptations by ectomycorrhizal caesalps to this strongly
seasonal and phosphorus-poor site is considered.
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