Title
Patterns of wood carbon dioxide efflux across a 2,000-m elevation transect in an Andean moist forest
Date Issued
01 January 2010
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
University of Göttingen
Abstract
During a 1-year measurement period, we recorded the CO2 efflux from stems (RS) and coarse woody roots (RR) of 13-20 common tree species at three study sites at 1,050, 1,890 and 3,050 m a.s.l. in an Andean moist forest. The objective of this work was to study elevation changes of woody tissue CO2 efflux and the relationship to climate variation, site characteristics and growth. Furthermore, we aim to provide insights into important respiration-productivity relationships of a little studied tropical vegetation type. We expected RS and RR to vary with dry and humid season conditions. We further expected RS to vary more than RR due to a more stable soil than air temperature regime. Seasonal variation in woody tissue CO2 efflux was indeed mainly attributable to stems. At the same time, temperature played only a small role in triggering variations in RS. At stand level, the ratio of C release (g C m-2 ground area year-1) between stems and roots varied from 4:1 at 1,050 m to 1:1 at 3,050 m, indicating the increasing prevalence of root activity at high elevations. The fraction of growth respiration from total respiration varied between 10 (3,050 m) and 14% (1,050 m) for stems and between 5 (1,050 m) and 30% (3,050 m) for roots. Our results show that respiratory activity and hence productivity is not driven by low temperatures towards higher elevations in this tropical montane forest. We suggest that future studies should examine the limitation of carbohydrate supply from leaves as a driver for the changes in respiratory activity with elevation. © The Author(s) 2009.
Start page
127
End page
137
Volume
162
Issue
1
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ciencias del medio ambiente
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-77949775109
PubMed ID
Source
Oecologia
Resource of which it is part
Oecologia
ISSN of the container
00298549
Source funding
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Sponsor(s)
Acknowledgments We thank the Ministerio del Ambiente Loja-Zamora for granting the research permit, and the Fundación CientÃfica San Francisco (Nature and Culture International) for ongoing support at the Estación CientÃfica San Francisco. We thank Gerald Moser (University of Gottingen) for contributing data on climate and general stand characteristics. This study was funded by the DFG (German Science Foundation) through a grant to the Research Unit 402 (Functionality in a Tropical Mountain Rainforest, subproject B6). We declare that this work complies with the current laws of Ecuador.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción CientÃfica
Scopus