1. Altitudinal Change in the Photosynthetic Capacity of Tropical Trees: A Case Study from Ecuador and a Pantropical Literature Analysis
- Author
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Christoph Leuschner, Bärbel Wittich, Viviana Horna, and Jürgen Homeier
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Canopy ,Ecology ,altitudinal gradient ,foliar N ,foliar P ,leaf dark respiration ,light-saturated net photosynthesis ,tropical lowland forests ,mature trees ,C source limitation ,tropical montane forests ,Range (biology) ,Life Sciences ,Geoecology/Natural Processes ,Environmental Management ,Plant Sciences ,Nature Conservation ,Zoology ,Elevation ,Context (language use) ,15. Life on land ,Biology ,Photosynthesis ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Photosynthetic capacity ,Altitude ,Agronomy ,Botany ,Environmental Chemistry ,Soil fertility ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
In tropical mountains, trees are the dominant life form from sea level to above 4,000-m altitude under highly variable thermal conditions (range of mean annual temperatures: 28°C). How light-saturated net photosynthesis of tropical trees adapts to variation in temperature, atmospheric CO2 concentration, and further environmental factors, that change along elevation gradients, is not precisely known. With gas exchange measurements in mature trees, we determined light-saturated net photosynthesis at ambient temperature (T) and [CO2] (Asat) of 40 tree species from 21 families in tropical mountain forests at 1000-, 2000-, and 3000-m elevation in southern Ecuador. We tested the hypothesis that stand-level averages of Asat and leaf dark respiration (RD) per leaf area remain constant with elevation. Stand-level means of Asat were 8.8, 11.3, and 7.2 μmol CO2 m−2 s−1; those of RD 0.8, 0.6, and 0.7 μmol CO2 m−2 s−1 at 1000-, 2000-, and 3000-m elevation, respectively, with no significant altitudinal trend. We obtained coefficients of among-species variation in Asat and RD of 20–53% (n = 10–16 tree species per stand). Examining our data in the context of a pan-tropical Asat data base for mature tropical trees (c. 170 species from 18 sites at variable elevation) revealed that area-based Asat decreases in tropical mountains by, on average, 1.3 μmol CO2 m−2 s−1 per km altitude increase (or by 0.2 μmol CO2 m−2 s−1 per K temperature decrease). The Asat decrease occurred despite an increase in leaf mass per area with altitude. Local geological and soil fertility conditions and related foliar N and P concentrations considerably influenced the altitudinal Asat patterns. We conclude that elevation is an important influencing factor of the photosynthetic activity of tropical trees. Lowered Asat together with a reduced stand leaf area decrease canopy C gain with elevation in tropical mountains. peerReviewed
- Published
- 2012
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