Abstract

Early studies of nutrient cycling in moist tropical forests described productive forests rich in nutrients (98, 114, 176) in which rates of primary production and the amounts of nutrients cycled clearly exceeded those in temperate zone forests. Reviews of global-scale patterns in biomass, production, and nutrient cycling reported these results as representative of tropical forests (130, 175). At the same time, tropical forest soils were described as acid, infertile clays that harden irreversibly to laterite when cleared (106), or as bleached quartz sands low in mineral nutrients (88). This apparent paradox was crystallized by Whittaker (174) in the statement The tropical rain forest thus has a relatively rich nutrient economy perched on a nutrient-poor substrate (p. 271). Reviews of more recent research on overall patterns of mineral cycling in the tropics (78, 124), and of important components such as biomass (20, 21), litterfall nutrients (123, 164), and decomposition (5), clearly show that patterns of nutrient cycling in tropical forests are diverse. It makes no more sense to describe a 'typical' tropical forest than a 'typical' temperate forest (33, 151). Variations in mineral cycling nonetheless follow coherent, explicable patterns in tropical forests. Our purposes in undertaking this review are: (a) to illustrate the patterns of nutrient cycling in moist tropical forests; (b) to identify the mechanisms which regulate those patterns; and (c) to show how those patterns affect the productivity, physiology, and population biology of tropical forests and their large-scale linkages with aquatic ecosystems and the atmosphere. We emphasize the cycling of nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, calcium, and magnesium; these are the best-studied soil-derived nutrients, and they are the nutrients most likely to limit primary production and other ecosystem functions.

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