Environmental, structural, and taxonomic diversity factors drive aboveground carbon stocks in semi‐deciduous tropical rainforest strata in Cameroon

Author:

Zekeng Jules Christian1234ORCID,van der Sande Masha T.567,Fobane Jean Louis8,Mphinyane Wanda N.2,Sebego Reuben2,Ebanga Paul André1,Mbolo Marguerite Marie1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant Biology Faculty of Science, University of Yaounde I Yaounde Cameroon

2. Department of Environmental Science, Faculty of Science University of Botswana Gaborone Botswana

3. Conservation and Sustainable Natural Resources Management Network (CSNRM‐Net) Yaounde Cameroon

4. Oliver R. Tambo Research Chair Initiative (ORTARChI) of Environment and Development Copperbelt University Kitwe Zambia

5. Department of Biological Sciences Florida Institute of Technology Melbourne Florida USA

6. Institute for Biodiversity & Ecosystem Dynamics University of Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

7. Forest Ecology and Forest Management Group Wageningen University and Research Wageningen The Netherlands

8. Department of Biological Sciences, Higher Teachers' Training College University of Yaounde I Yaounde Cameroon

Abstract

AbstractForest stratification plays a crucial role in the interception of light and plants' photosynthetic activities. However, there is still a lack of information on the contribution of tropical forest stratification to its functioning, despite the increasing number of studies. Here, we analysed from a perspective of the whole tree community (WTC) and forest strata (i.e., large trees, understory trees, and small stems), the relationship between abiotic, biotic factors and aboveground Carbon (AGC). The abiotic factors‐AGC relationships were positive for all strata and WTC. However, soil factors‐AGC relationship was stronger for small stems and understorey, while topography factor‐AGC relationship was stronger for large trees and WTC. Tree size inequality‐AGC relationship was positive and much stronger for WTC, large trees and small stems. In addition, a species diversity‐AGC relationship was found positive only for large trees and WTC. These results highlight the niche complementarity effect for driving positive relationships of species diversity and individual tree size variation with aboveground biomass at large tree strata and WTC. The lack of positive effect of species diversity on AGC for understorey and small stems strata might be attributable to the selection effect or resource complementarity among species.

Funder

British Ecological Society

Idea Wild

Rufford Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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