Climate factors affect forest biomass allocation by altering soil nutrient availability and leaf traits

Author:

Gong Hede1,Song Wenchen2,Wang Jiangfeng3,Wang Xianxian3,Ji Yuhui3,Zhang Xinyu4,Gao Jie35

Affiliation:

1. School of Geography and Ecotourism Southwest Forestry University Kunming 650224 China

2. College of Life Sciences Minzu University of China Beijing 100081 China

3. College of Life Sciences Xinjiang Normal University Urumqi 830054 China

4. College of Biological Sciences University of California Davis Davis 95616 California USA

5. Key Laboratory of Earth Surface Processes of Ministry of Education, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences Peking University Beijing 100091 China

Abstract

AbstractBiomass in forests sequesters substantial amounts of carbon; although the contribution of aboveground biomass has been extensively studied, the contribution of belowground biomass remains understudied. Investigating the forest biomass allocation is crucial for understanding the impacts of global change on carbon allocation and cycling. Moreover, the question of how climate factors affect biomass allocation in natural and planted forests remains unresolved. Here, we addressed this question by collecting data from 384 planted forests and 541 natural forests in China. We evaluated the direct and indirect effects of climate factors on the belowground biomass proportion (BGBP). The average BGBP was 31.09% in natural forests and was significantly higher (38.75%) in planted forests. Furthermore, we observed a significant decrease in BGBP with increasing temperature and precipitation. Climate factors, particularly those affecting soil factors, such as pH, strongly affected the BGBP in natural and planted forests. Based on our results, we propose that future studies should consider the effects of forest type (natural or planted) and soil factors on BGBP.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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