Leaf decomposition and flammability are largely decoupled across species in a tropical swamp forest despite sharing some predictive leaf functional traits

Author:

Rahman Nur E. B.1ORCID,Smith Stuart W.12ORCID,Lam Weng Ngai1ORCID,Chong Kwek Yan34ORCID,Chua Matthias S. E.13,Teo Pei Yun1,Lee Daniel W. J.1ORCID,Phua Shi Yu1,Aw Cheryl Y.1,Lee Janice S. H.1ORCID,Wardle David A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Asian School of the Environment Nanyang Technological University 62 Nanyang Drive Singapore City 637459 Singapore

2. Ecology, Conservation and Zoonosis Research and Enterprise Group, School of Applied Sciences University of Brighton Lewes Road Brighton BN2 4GJ UK

3. Department of Biological Sciences National University of Singapore Science Drive 4 Singapore City 117558 Singapore

4. Singapore Botanic Gardens, National Parks Board 1 Cluny Road Singapore City 259 569 Singapore

Abstract

Summary Decomposition and fire are major carbon pathways in many ecosystems, yet potential linkages between these processes are poorly understood. We test whether variability in decomposability and flammability across species are related to each other and to key plant functional traits in tropical swamp forests, where habitat degradation is elevating decomposition and fire regimes. Using senesced and fresh leaves of 22 swamp tree species in Singapore, we conducted an in situ decomposition experiment and a laboratory flammability experiment. We analysed 16 leaf physical and biochemical traits as predictors of decomposability and components of flammability: combustibility, ignitability and sustainability. Decomposability and flammability were largely decoupled across species, despite some shared predictive traits such as specific leaf area (SLA). Physical traits predicted that thicker leaves with a smaller SLA and volume decomposed faster, while various cation concentrations predicted flammability components, particularly ignitability. We show that flammability and decomposability of swamp forest leaves are decoupled because flammability is mostly driven by biochemical traits, while decomposition is driven by physical traits. Our approach identifies species that are slow to decompose and burn (e.g. Calophyllum tetrapterum and Xanthophyllum flavescens), which could be planted to mitigate carbon losses in tropical swamp reforestation.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

Reference68 articles.

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