Abstract

Vegetation restoration in karst areas has shifted from expanding planting areas to the collective enhancement of various ecological functions, especially carbon sequestration. Identifying and regulating key plant functional traits involved in the carbon cycle is an effective approach to increase carbon sequestration. However, reports on the significant contribution of petiole traits to the carbon cycle are scarce. Eucalyptus globulus and Bauhinia purpurea plantations in Liujiang river basin were investigated in this study. Petiole traits, understory characteristics, and soil organic carbon have been measured. The aim is to explore key effect of petiole traits for increasing soil carbon sequestration and to provide scientific evidence for the high-quality development of plantations in karst areas. The results indicate that in Eucalyptus globulus plantations, when the understory vegetation coverage is below 50 %, petioles tend to elongate rather than thicken, leading to an increase in specific petiole length. In Bauhinia purpurea plantations, petioles consistently tend to increase diameter. However, when specific leaf area decreases, specific petiole length increases. In both plantations, an increase in specific petiole length accelerates leaf shedding. It leads to increased litter accumulation so that soil carbon content increases. In Eucalyptus globulus plantations, to enhance soil carbon sequestration as an ecological goal, it is recommended to keep the soil total nitrogen below 1.20 mg/g, to control understory vegetation coverage below 50 %, and to limit the extension of Bidens pilosa. In Bauhinia purpurea plantations, within 100 m of altitude, the soil total nitrogen can be controlled below 1.00 mg/g to increase soil organic carbon from large leaf shedding due to the increase of specific petiole length. At lower altitudes, increasing soil total nitrogen can enhance understory vegetation coverage, allowing soil organic carbon to originate from both leaf shedding and understory vegetation residues.

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