van der Heijden Geertje M F, Powers Jennifer S, Schnitzer Stefan A
Department of Biology, Marquette University, Milwaukee, WI 53201; Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Apartado Postal 0843-03092, Panamá; School of Geography, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, NG7 2RD, United Kingdom;
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Apartado Postal 0843-03092, Panamá; Department of Plant Biology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108; Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Oct 27;112(43):13267-71. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1504869112. Epub 2015 Oct 12.
Tropical forests store vast quantities of carbon, account for one-third of the carbon fixed by photosynthesis, and are a major sink in the global carbon cycle. Recent evidence suggests that competition between lianas (woody vines) and trees may reduce forest-wide carbon uptake; however, estimates of the impact of lianas on carbon dynamics of tropical forests are crucially lacking. Here we used a large-scale liana removal experiment and found that, at 3 y after liana removal, lianas reduced net above-ground carbon uptake (growth and recruitment minus mortality) by ∼76% per year, mostly by reducing tree growth. The loss of carbon uptake due to liana-induced mortality was four times greater in the control plots in which lianas were present, but high variation among plots prevented a significant difference among the treatments. Lianas altered how aboveground carbon was stored. In forests where lianas were present, the partitioning of forest aboveground net primary production was dominated by leaves (53.2%, compared with 39.2% in liana-free forests) at the expense of woody stems (from 28.9%, compared with 43.9%), resulting in a more rapid return of fixed carbon to the atmosphere. After 3 y of experimental liana removal, our results clearly demonstrate large differences in carbon cycling between forests with and without lianas. Combined with the recently reported increases in liana abundance, these results indicate that lianas are an important and increasing agent of change in the carbon dynamics of tropical forests.
热带森林储存着大量碳,占光合作用固定碳总量的三分之一,是全球碳循环中的一个主要碳汇。最近的证据表明,藤本植物(木质藤本)与树木之间的竞争可能会降低整个森林的碳吸收量;然而,目前严重缺乏对藤本植物对热带森林碳动态影响的评估。在此,我们通过一项大规模的藤本植物清除实验发现,在清除藤本植物3年后,藤本植物使地上净碳吸收量(生长量与新植株数量减去死亡率)每年减少约76%,主要是通过抑制树木生长实现的。在有藤本植物的对照样地中,因藤本植物导致的死亡率造成的碳吸收损失是前者的四倍,但样地间的高变异性使得各处理之间没有显著差异。藤本植物改变了地上碳的储存方式。在有藤本植物的森林中,森林地上净初级生产力的分配以叶片为主(占53.2%,无藤本植物的森林中为39.2%),而以木质茎为代价(从28.9%降至43.9%),导致固定碳更快地返回大气。经过3年的实验性藤本植物清除后,我们的结果清楚地表明了有藤本植物和无藤本植物的森林在碳循环方面存在巨大差异。结合最近报道的藤本植物丰度增加情况,这些结果表明藤本植物是热带森林碳动态变化的一个重要且日益重要的因素。