Mingke Fang, A. Atapattu, Luxiang Lin, Shang-wen Xia, Xiaodong Yang
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Soil Nutrient Concentrations, Associations and Their Relationships with Canopy Tree Category and Size in the Southwestern China Tropical Rainforests
ABSTRACT Soil nutrients and their stoichiometry are important indicators of nutrient biogeochemical cycles and various ecological processes. Soil nutrients are heterogeneously distributed and can be influenced by plants through litterfall and root activity. To explore the associations between soil nutrients and relationships between soil nutrients and plant characteristics, we selected three canopy tree categories based on abundance as dominant, common, and rare, with different plant sizes based on DBH (diameter at breast height, cm) for each species from three 1 ha tropical forest sites (Bu-Beng, P55, and Na-Ban-He forests), and collected the topsoil (0–10 cm) for physiochemical analysis. The results showed that soil nutrient concentrations were significantly different among the three forest sites. For soil total C, N, and P associations, soil total C and N had significant associations at all three sites; however, the associations of soil total C-P and N-P varied among sites. The plant category had significant relationships with soil stoichiometry, whereas plant size had significant relationships with soil nutrient concentrations; these relationships varied among the three sites. The results indicate that soil nutrient heterogeneity is influenced by tree category and size. Future studies should include a larger sample size to further validate these results.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Sustainable Forestry publishes peer-reviewed, original research on forest science. While the emphasis is on sustainable use of forest products and services, the journal covers a wide range of topics from the underlying biology and ecology of forests to the social, economic and policy aspects of forestry. Short communications and review papers that provide a clear theoretical, conceptual or methodological contribution to the existing literature are also included in the journal.
Common topics covered in the Journal of Sustainable Forestry include:
• Ecology, management, recreation, restoration and silvicultural systems of all forest types, including urban forests
• All aspects of forest biology, including ecophysiology, entomology, pathology, genetics, tree breeding, and biotechnology
• Wood properties, forest biomass, bioenergy, and carbon sequestration
• Simulation modeling, inventory, quantitative methods, and remote sensing
• Environmental pollution, fire and climate change impacts, and adaptation and mitigation in forests
• Forest engineering, economics, human dimensions, natural resource policy, and planning
Journal of Sustainable Forestry provides an international forum for dialogue between research scientists, forest managers, economists and policy and decision makers who share the common vision of the sustainable use of natural resources.