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In deep shade, elevated CO 2 increases the vigor of tropical climbing plants
Author(s) -
GRANADOS JULIÁN,
KÖRNER CHRISTIAN
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
global change biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.146
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1365-2486
pISSN - 1354-1013
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2486.2002.00533.x
Subject(s) - understory , biomass (ecology) , botany , horticulture , sapindaceae , biology , agronomy , canopy
Climbing plants have profound influences on tropical forest dynamics and may take particular advantage from atmospheric CO 2 enrichment, thus potentially enhancing tree turnover. Here we test the effect of a four‐step CO 2 ‐enrichment on growth of three typical Yucatan (Mexico) climbers, across two low photon flux densities, representing typical understory situations. In pairs of two, species of Gonolobus (Asclepiadaceae), Ceratophytum (Bignoniaceae) and Thinouia (Sapindaceae) were grown on Yucatan forest soil in growth cabinets, which simulated the diurnal climate variation. Biomass increased non‐linearly in response to CO 2 enrichment from 280 (preindustrial) to 420 ppm and 560 ppm, but then (700 ppm) leveled off. The relative effect of CO 2 ‐enrichment between the two lower (280–420 ppm) CO 2 concentrations was 63% at low light (LL == 42 µmol m 2−2 s 2−1 ), compared to 37% at high light (HL = 87 µmol m 2−2 s 2−1 ). This overall response of species pairs was the combined effect of linear and non‐linear responses of the individual species across CO 2 treatments. Plant biomass was 61% larger in HL compared to LL. The species‐specific response depended on the neighbor, a species grew with h, irrespective of plant size. Stem length increased, but not consistently across species and light conditions. Specific stem length (SSL, length per dry mass) declined non‐linearly in all three species as CO 2 concentration increased (more pronounced at LL than at HL). SLA (leaf area per unit leaf dry mass) became lower as CO 2 concentration increased (more pronounced in HL). Enhanced vigor of climbers under elevated CO 2 as documented here may accelerate tropical forest dynamics and lead to greater abundance of early succesional tree species. This could reduce forest carbon stocking in the long run.