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Carbon and Nutrient Cycling in Afromontane Tropical Forests at Different Successional Stages.

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dc.contributor.author Nyirambangutse, Brigitte
dc.date.accessioned 2017-07-28T08:44:16Z
dc.date.available 2017-07-28T08:44:16Z
dc.date.issued 2016
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/200 https://gupea.ub.gu.se/bitstream/2077/47963/1/gupea_2077_47963_1.pdf
dc.description PhD thesis en_US
dc.description.abstract To date, studies of the carbon and nutrient cycling in tropical montane forests have been restricted to a few, mostly neotropical, sites. This thesis investigated the carbon and nutrient cycling of early (ES) and late (LS) successional forest stands in Nyungwe forest, one of Africa’s largest remaining tropical montane forests. The stocks and fluxes of carbon and nutrients, as well as the factors controlling these, were studied in 15 forest plots established within this PhD project. Paper I explored forest carbon dynamics and demonstrated that Afromontane tropical forests contain large amounts of carbon, with the carbon stocks of LS stands being higher than those reported for tropical montane LS forests in South Asia and Central and South America. The total C stock was 35% higher in LS compared to ES stands due to significantly larger aboveground biomass (AGB), but productivity did not differ between the two successional stages. Differences in species composition and stem properties (wood density, height:diameter relationship) explained the differences in AGB between ES and LS forest stands. Paper II investigated canopy nutrient cycling. It was found that neither leaf nutrient concentrations (exception: K) nor nutrient resorption efficiencies during senescence differed between ES and LS species. Furthermore, total leaf litterfall and its content of C, N, P and K did not differ between ES and LS stands. Mean resorption efficiencies of N (37%), P (48%) and K (46%) were much higher than for other nutrients. Nutrient resorption efficiency exhibited a very large interspecific variation which was not related to the leaf concentration of the respective element. High leaf N concentrations, intermediate N:P ratios, and low resorption efficiencies compared to values reported for other TMF together indicate high fertility and likely co-limitation by N and P in this forest. Paper III showed that interspecific variation in photosynthetic capacity among tropical montane trees was related to within-leaf N allocation rather than to total area-based leaf N content. While ES species had higher photosynthetic capacity (+58 to +67 %), dark respiration (+41%) and photosynthetic quantum yield (+38%) than LS species, the two groups did not significantly differ in total leaf N content, chlorophyll content or leaf mass per unit area. Paper IV investigated the spatial and temporal variation in soil CO2 efflux and found that the daytime variation correlated with soil temperature while the nighttime variation did not. Spatial variation in soil CO2 efflux was strongly related to soil C and N content. The results demonstrate that Nyungwe montane forest contains large amounts of carbon (especially in LS stands) and have high productivity. The thesis also shows that accounting for the effects of forest disturbance on stand structure, especially species composition, substantially improves the estimations of carbon stocks. Furthermore, it contributes to the understanding of these forests by elucidating which factors that control tree growth, photosynthetic capacity and soil CO2 efflux. The findings of this thesis contribute to reducing a large knowledge gap regarding the carbon and nutrient stocks and dynamics of African tropical montane forests at different successional stages. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship University of Rwanda en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher University of Gothenburg en_US
dc.subject Tropical montane forest en_US
dc.subject Successional stage en_US
dc.subject Carbon en_US
dc.subject Photosynthesis en_US
dc.subject Soil CO2 efflux en_US
dc.subject Nutrient cycling en_US
dc.title Carbon and Nutrient Cycling in Afromontane Tropical Forests at Different Successional Stages. en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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