Abstract

Both Moso bamboo (Phyllostachys pubescens) and tree forests have a large biomass; they are considered to play an important role in ecosystem carbon budgets. The scaling relationship between individual whole-shoot (i.e., aboveground parts) respiration and whole-shoot mass provides a clue for comparing the carbon budgets of Moso bamboo and tree forests. However, nobody has empirically demonstrated whether there is a difference between these forest types in the whole-shoot scaling relationship. We developed whole-shoot chambers and measured the shoot respiration of 58 individual mature bamboo shoots from the smallest to the largest in a Moso bamboo forest, and then compared them with that of 254 tree shoots previously measured. For 30 bamboo shoots, we measured the respiration rate of leaves, branches, and culms. We found that the scaling exponent of whole-shoot respiration of bamboo fitted by a simple power function on a log–log scale was 0.843 (95 % CI 0.797–0.885), which was consistent with that of trees, 0.826 (95 % CI 0.799–0.851), but higher than 3/4, the value typifying the Kleiber’s rule. The respiration rates of leaves, branches, and culms at the whole-shoot level were proportional to their mass, revealing a constant mean mass-specific respiration of 1.19, 0.224, and 0.0978 µmol CO2 kg− 1 s− 1, respectively. These constant values suggest common traits of organs among physiologically integrated ramets within a genet. Additionally, the larger the shoots, the smaller the allocation of organ mass to the metabolically active leaves, and the larger the allocation to the metabolically inactive culms. Therefore, these shifts in shoot-mass partitioning to leaves and culms caused a negative metabolic scaling of Moso bamboo shoots. The observed convergent metabolic scaling of Moso bamboo and trees may facilitate comparisons of the ecosystem carbon budgets of Moso bamboo and tree forests.

Highlights

  • Plant size is one of the most important factors that explain the relationship between carbon supply and demand at the whole-plant to ecosystem scales (Collalti et al 2019; O’Leary et al 2019)

  • We compared them with the shoot respiration rate of 254 trees composed of 67 species (Mori et al 2010), which were previously measured using the same methods employed in this study

  • Size scaling of whole‐shoot respiration vs. whole‐shoot fresh mass in bamboo and trees

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Summary

Introduction

Plant size is one of the most important factors that explain the relationship between carbon supply and demand at the whole-plant to ecosystem scales (Collalti et al 2019; O’Leary et al 2019). Moso bamboo (Phyllostachys pubescens (Carrière) J.Houz.) covers the largest area, 3.37 million ha, accounting for 70 % of China’s bamboo-growing area (Song et al 2011; Yuen et al 2017; Isagi et al 2016) analyzed the genetic diversity of Moso bamboo for the entire distribution range from Japan to China using microsatellite markers and found that the samples from Japan and China comprise an identical clone They reported that the clone was distributed over more than 2800 km and the estimated biomass was approximately 6.6 × ­1011 kg (Isagi et al 2016). We compared them with the shoot respiration rate of 254 trees composed of 67 species (Mori et al 2010), which were previously measured using the same methods employed in this study

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