Effects of nutrient additions on ecosystem carbon cycle in a Puerto Rican tropical wet forest

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Abstract

Wet tropical forests play a critical role in global ecosystem carbon (C) cycle, but C allocation and the response of different C pools to nutrient addition in these forests remain poorly understood. We measured soil organic carbon (SOC), litterfall, root biomass, microbial biomass and soil physical and chemical properties in a wet tropical forest from May 1996 to July 1997 following a 7-year continuous fertilization. We found that although there was no significant difference in total SOC in the top 0-10 cm of the soils between the fertilization plots (5.42±0.18 kg m-2) and the control plots (5.27 ± 0.22 kg m-2), the proportion of the heavy-fraction organic C in the total SOC was significantly higher in the fertilized plots (59%) than in the control plots (46%) (Po0.05). The annual decomposition rate of fertilized leaf litter was 13% higher than that of the control leaf litter. We also found that fertilization significantly increased microbial biomass (fungi + bacteria) with 952 ± 48mg kg-1 soil in the fertilized plots and 755 ± 37 mg kg-1 soil in the control plots. Our results suggest that fertilization in tropical forests may enhance long-term C sequestration in the soils of tropical wet forests. © 2006 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Li, Y., Xu, M., & Zou, X. (2006). Effects of nutrient additions on ecosystem carbon cycle in a Puerto Rican tropical wet forest. Global Change Biology, 12(2), 284–293. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2486.2005.01096.x

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