Litcius/Paper detail

Phosphorus limitation of early growth differs between nitrogen‐fixing and nonfixing dry tropical forest tree species

Laura Toro, Damaris Pereira-Arias, Daniel Peréz‐Aviles, German Vargas G., Fiona M. Soper, Jessica Gutknecht, Jennifer S. Powers

2022New Phytologist44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Tropical forests are often characterized by low soil phosphorus (P) availability, suggesting that P limits plant performance. However, how seedlings from different functional types respond to soil P availability is poorly known but important for understanding and modeling forest dynamics under changing environmental conditions. We grew four nitrogen (N)-fixing Fabaceae and seven diverse non-N-fixing tropical dry forest tree species in a shade house under three P fertilization treatments and evaluated carbon (C) allocation responses, P demand, P-use, investment in P acquisition traits, and correlations among P acquisition traits. Nitrogen fixers grew larger with increasing P addition in contrast to non-N fixers, which showed fewer responses in C allocation and P use. Foliar P increased with P addition for both functional types, while P acquisition strategies did not vary among treatments but differed between functional types, with N fixers showing higher root phosphatase activity (RPA) than nonfixers. Growth responses suggest that N fixers are limited by P, but nonfixers may be limited by other resources. However, regardless of limitation, P acquisition traits such as mycorrhizal colonization and RPA were nonplastic across a steep P gradient. Differential limitation among plant functional types has implications for forest succession and earth system models.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyPhosphorusTropical forestTropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forestsEcological successionAgronomyEcologyBotanyChemistryOrganic chemistrySoil Carbon and Nitrogen DynamicsPlant nutrient uptake and metabolismSoil and Water Nutrient Dynamics