globalchange  > 气候减缓与适应
DOI: 10.1038/ngeo2443
论文题名:
Landscape biogeochemistry reflected in shifting distributions of chemical traits in the Amazon forest canopy
作者: Asner G.P.; Anderson C.B.; Martin R.E.; Tupayachi R.; Knapp D.E.; Sinca F.
刊名: Nature Geoscience
ISSN: 17520894
出版年: 2015
卷: 8, 期:7
起始页码: 567
结束页码: 575
语种: 英语
英文摘要: Tropical forest functional diversity, which is a measure of the diversity of organismal interactions with the environment, is poorly understood despite its importance for linking evolutionary biology to ecosystem biogeochemistry. Functional diversity is reflected in functional traits such as the concentrations of different compounds in leaves or the density of leaf mass, which are related to plant activities such as plant defence, nutrient cycling, or growth. In the Amazonian lowlands, river movement and microtopography control nutrient mobility, which may influence functional trait distributions. Here we use airborne laser-guided imaging spectroscopy to develop maps of 16 forest canopy traits, throughout four large landscapes that harbour three common forest community types on the Madre de Dios and Tambopata rivers in southwestern Amazonia. Our maps, which are based on quantitative chemometric analysis of forest canopies with visible-to-near infrared (400-2,500 nm) spectroscopy, reveal substantial variation in canopy traits and their distributions within and among forested landscapes. Forest canopy trait distributions are arranged in a nested pattern, with location along rivers controlling trait variation between different landscapes, and microtopography controlling trait variation within landscapes. We suggest that processes of nutrient deposition and depletion drive increasing phosphorus limitation, and a corresponding increase in plant defence, in an eastward direction from the base of the Andes into the Amazon Basin. Chapin, F. S.
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资源类型: 期刊论文
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/106319
Appears in Collections:气候减缓与适应
科学计划与规划

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作者单位: Department of Global Ecology, Carnegie Institution for Science, 260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA, United States

Recommended Citation:
Asner G.P.,Anderson C.B.,Martin R.E.,et al. Landscape biogeochemistry reflected in shifting distributions of chemical traits in the Amazon forest canopy[J]. Nature Geoscience,2015-01-01,8(7)
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