E. Cuevas et Ae. Lugo, Dynamics of organic matter and nutrient return from litterfall in stands of ten tropical tree plantation species, FOREST ECOL, 112(3), 1998, pp. 263-279
We studied the rates and patterns of carbon and nutrient fluxes in litterfa
ll in ten tropical tree plantation species grown at the USDA Forest Service
Arboretum in the Luquillo Experimental Forest, Puerto Rico. The stands wer
e 26-years old and grew under similar climatic and edaphic conditions. indi
vidual plantation species ranked differently in terms of their capacity to
return mass and specific nutrients to the forest floor, and with respect to
their efficiency of nutrient use. The species that returned the most mass
did not return the most P, N, or cations. Moreover, species differed accord
ing to the amount of N and P resorption before leaf fall. These differences
reflect the variation in the ecophysiological response of each species to
edaphic and climatic conditions. The difference between average and minimum
resorption values of the species studied indicate that other environmental
factors, such as heavy winds or the physical effects of heavy rains, can f
orce the shedding of non-senesced leaves. This higher quality material, alt
hough not very much in quantity, can provide a small pulse of available nut
rients to the forest floor community. The same holds true for other high nu
trient/low mass fractions of litterfall such as reproductive parts and misc
ellaneous materials.
In areas with no prevalent or strongly seasonal water limitations, temporal
variations of leaf litter on the forest floor are the combined result of t
he rate of fall and decomposition of the falling material, and the diverse
responses of species to different environmental cues. Leaf fall was inverse
ly correlated to reduced water availability in three of the species studied
. Leaf fall of the other species was correlated either to daylight duration
or minimum temperatures. The results highlight the importance of understan
ding species performance relative to nutrient and mass metabolism before se
lection for plantation use, or for rehabilitation of degraded lands. (C) 19
98 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.