Evidence for Soil Phosphorus Resource Partitioning in a Diverse Tropical Tree Community

Author:

Müller Robert12ORCID,Elsenbeer Helmut1ORCID,Turner Benjamin L.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Environmental Science and Geography, University of Potsdam, Karl-Liebknecht-Str. 24-25, 14476 Potsdam, Germany

2. Geological Survey, State Office for Mining, Geology and Raw Materials of Brandenburg, Inselstraße 26, 03046 Cottbus, Germany

3. Institute of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Gyeongsang National University, Jinju 52828, Republic of Korea

Abstract

Soil phosphorus (P) partitioning could contribute to species diversity and structure in plant communities, but field-scale evidence for P partitioning remains scarce. We hypothesized that the presence of P partitioning could be inferred from statistical associations between the spatial distributions of plants and chemical forms of bioavailable soil P. We investigated this in a diverse tropical tree community on Barro Colorado Island, Panama. We quantified potentially bioavailable forms of soil P by extraction in 2 mM citric acid followed by treatment with phosphatase enzymes. We then linked these P forms to the distribution of 189 tree species in a 50 ha forest dynamics plot by testing species–P associations against null models of random dispersal. We found that 20% of tree species were significantly (α = 0.05) associated with the depletion of at least one soil organic P fraction, although around half of these associations might be false rejections of the null hypothesis due to type I error. Species in the Fabaceae (legumes), which are known to express high rates of phosphatase in their roots, were most frequently associated with soil P fractions. We interpret our findings as evidence of widespread P partitioning at the community scale, affecting a relatively small proportion of tree species in this moderately fertile forest. We predict that stronger evidence of partitioning will be found at sites with lower P availability.

Funder

German Academic Scholarship Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference91 articles.

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