Abstract

Tropical forests are important in worldwide carbon (C) storage and sequestration. C sequestration of these forests may especially be determined by the growth of canopy trees. However, the factors driving variation in growth among such large individuals remain largely unclear. We evaluate how crown traits [total leaf area, specific leaf area and leaf nitrogen (N) concentration] and stem traits [sapwood area (SA) and sapwood N concentration] measured for individual trees affect absolute biomass growth for 43 tropical canopy trees belonging to four species, in a moist forest in Bolivia. Biomass growth varied strongly among trees, between 17.3 and 367.3 kg year−1, with an average of 105.4 kg year−1. We found that variation in biomass growth was chiefly explained by a positive effect of SA, and not by tree size or other traits examined. SA itself was positively associated with sapwood growth, sapwood lifespan and basal area. We speculate that SA positively affects the growth of individual trees mainly by increasing water storage, thus securing water supply to the crown. These positive roles of sapwood on growth apparently offset the increased respiration costs incurred by more sapwood. This is one of the first individual-based studies to show that variation in sapwood traits—and not crown traits—explains variation in growth among tropical canopy trees. Accurate predictions of C dynamics in tropical forests require similar studies on biomass growth of individual trees as well as studies evaluating the dual effect of sapwood (water provision vs. respiratory costs) on tropical tree growth.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00442-015-3220-y) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Tropical forests cover about 10 % of the earth’s surface, but store 25 % of global terrestrial carbon (C) and account for 34 % of terrestrial gross primary productivity (Bonan 2008; Lewis et al 2009; Malhi 2012)

  • In this study we evaluated the relative effect of various size- and tissue-related stem and crown traits on biomass growth of 43 tropical canopy trees belonging to four species

  • The presented averaged model reflects the average of the five best-fitting models, because they differed less than two Akaike information criteria (AIC) units from the single best model

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Summary

Introduction

Tropical forests cover about 10 % of the earth’s surface, but store 25 % of global terrestrial carbon (C) and account for 34 % of terrestrial gross primary productivity (Bonan 2008; Lewis et al 2009; Malhi 2012) They feature prominently in climate change mitigation policies, such as reduced emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD+) (Houghton 2005; Bonan 2008). Do not consider the direct relation between biomass growth and factors driving this at the individual tree level, but rather focus on average species performance and average species traits (e.g., Poorter and Bongers 2006; Wright et al 2010). Individual tree-level analyses may yield important insights into the drivers of tree growth (Binkley et al 2010; Sterck and Schieving 2011; Clark et al 2011)

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