Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T21:26:14.314Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Below-ground secondary succession in tropical forests of Borneo

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2011

Francis Q. Brearley*
Affiliation:
Department of Botany, Trinity College, University of Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland School of Science and the Environment, Manchester Metropolitan University, Chester Street, Manchester M1 5GD, UK

Abstract:

As the destruction and severe disturbance of primary tropical forest continues, it is important to understand how these forests may recover from perturbations. Considerable work has been done on above-ground recovery but below-ground processes are less well understood. To determine changes in root mass during tropical secondary succession in lowland forests of Central Borneo, samples were taken from stands of increasing ages since abandonment of agriculture (1, 3, 14 and 31 y) with a primary forest control (six plots from 1-y-old stands and three from all other ages). Root mass and elemental concentrations were determined and soils were chemically analysed. There was no increase in root mass with stand age for fine-root (< 2 mm diameter) or small-root (< 5 mm diameter) mass but there was a trend for coarse-root mass (5–10 mm diameter) to increase with stand age. Negative correlations were shown between root mass and soil nutrient status. Fine-root C concentrations increased with stand age but there was no clear effect of stand age on fine-root N or P. Fine-root mass did not increase significantly with stand age suggesting a rapid recovery; instead, soil nutrient status appeared to be the most important factor controlling root mass. Of the soil nutrients measured in this study, N had a stronger control over root mass than P suggesting that this element may be limiting during secondary succession in tropical lowland forests of Borneo.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

LITERATURE CITED

ARUNACHALAM, A., PANDEY, H. N., MAITHANI, K. & TRIPATHI, R. S. 1997. Organic matter and nutrient dynamics of fine and coarse roots during recovery of a felled subtropical humid forest. Russian Journal of Ecology 28:380385.Google Scholar
ASHWORTH, J. & MRAZEK, K. 1995. “Modified Kelowna” test for available phosphorus and potassium in soil. Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis 26:731739.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
BERISH, C. W. 1982. Root biomass and surface area in three successional tropical forests. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 12:699704.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
BLOOM, A. J., CHAPIN, , F. S. & MOONEY, H. A. 1985. Resource limitation in plants: an economic analogy. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 16:363392.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
BONAL, D., BORN, C., BRECHET, C., COSTE, S., MARCON, E., ROGGY, J.-C. & GUEHL, J.-M. 2007. The successional status of tropical rain forest tree species is associated with differences in leaf carbon isotope discrimination and functional traits. Annals of Forest Science 64:169176.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
BREARLEY, F. Q., PRAJADINATA, S., KIDD, P. S., PROCTOR, J. & SURIANTATA 2004. Structure and floristics of an old secondary rain forest in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia, and a comparison with adjacent primary forest. Forest Ecology and Management 195:385397.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
BREARLEY, F. Q., PROCTOR, J., SURIANTATA, NAGY, L., DALRYMPLE, G. & VOYSEY, B. C. 2007. Reproductive phenology over a 10-year period in a lowland evergreen rain forest of central Borneo. Journal of Ecology 95:828839.Google Scholar
BROWN, S. & LUGO, A. E. 1990. Tropical secondary forests. Journal of Tropical Ecology 6:132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
CAIRNS, M. A., BROWN, S., HELMER, E. H. & BAUMGARDNER, G. A. 1997. Root biomass allocation in the world's upland forests. Oecologia 111:111.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
CAVELIER, J., ESTEVEZ, J. & ARJONA, B. 1996. Fine-root biomass in three successional stages of an Andean cloud forest in Colombia. Biotropica 28:728736.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
CAVELIER, J., WRIGHT, S. J. & SANTAMARÍA, J. 1999. Effects of irrigation on litterfall, fine root biomass and production in a semideciduous lowland forest in Panama. Plant and Soil 211:207213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
CHAZDON, R. L., LETCHER, S. G., VAN BRUEGEL, M., MARTÍNEZ-RAMOS, M., BONGERS, F. & FINEGAN, B. 2007. Rates of change in tree communities of secondary Neotropical forests following major disturbances. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society Series B – Biological Sciences 362:273289.Google Scholar
CORLETT, R. T. 1995. Tropical secondary forests. Progress in Physical Geography 19:159172.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DAVIDSON, E. A., REIS DE CARVALHO, C. J., FIGUEIRA, A. M., ISHIDA, F. Y., OMETTO, J. P. H. B., NARDOTO, G. B., SABÁ, R. T., HAYASHI, S. N., LEAL, E. C., VIEIRA, I. C. G. & MARTINELLI, L. A. 2007. Recuperation of nitrogen cycling in Amazonian forests following agricultural abandonment. Nature 447:995998.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
DE JONG, W. 1997. Developing swidden agriculture and the threat of biodiversity loss. Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment 62:187197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
ELLSWORTH, D. S. & REICH, P. B. 1996. Photosynthesis and leaf nitrogen in five Amazonian tree species during early secondary succession. Ecology 77:581594.Google Scholar
FINEGAN, B. 1996. Patterns and process in Neotropical secondary rain forests: the first 100 years of succession. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 11:119124.Google Scholar
GORDON, W. S. & JACKSON, R. B. 2000. Nutrient concentrations in fine roots. Ecology 81:275280.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
GOWER, S. T. 1987. Relations between mineral nutrient availability and fine root biomass in two Costa Rican tropical wet forests: a hypothesis. Biotropica 19:171175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
GREEN, J. J. 1992. Fine root dynamics in a Bornean rain forest. Ph.D. thesis, University of Stirling, UK.Google Scholar
GREEN, J. J., DAWSON, L. A., PROCTOR, J., DUFF, E. I. & ELSTON, D. A. 2005. Fine root dynamics in a tropical rain forest is influenced by rainfall. Plant and Soil 276:2332.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
GUARIGUATA, M. R. & OSTERTAG, R. 2001. Neotropical secondary succession: changes in structural and functional characteristics. Forest Ecology and Management 148:185206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
HERTEL, D. & LEUSCHNER, C. 2010. Fine root mass and fine root production in tropical moist forests as dependent on soil, climate and elevation. Pp. 428444 in Bruijnzeel, L. A., Scatena, F. N. & Hamilton, L. S. (eds.). Tropical montane cloud forest: science for conservation and management. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
HERTEL, D., LEUSCHNER, C. & HÖLSCHER, D. 2003. Size and structure of fine root systems in old-growth and secondary tropical montane forests (Costa Rica). Biotropica 35:143153.Google Scholar
HERTEL, D., HÖLSCHER, D., KOHLER, L. & LEUSCHNER, C. 2006. Changes in fine root system size and structure during secondary succession in a Costa Rican montane oak forest. Pp. 283297 in Kapelle, M. (ed.). Ecology and conservation of neotropical montane oak forests. Ecological Studies Volume 185. Springer-Verlag, Berlin.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
JACKSON, R. B., MOONEY, H. A. & SCHULZE, E.-D. 1997. A global budget for fine root biomass, surface area, and nutrient contents. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 94:73627366.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
JARAMILLO, V. J., AHEDO-HERNÁNDEZ, R. & KAUFFMAN, J. B. 2003. Root biomass and carbon in a tropical evergreen forest of Mexico: changes with secondary succession and conversion to pasture. Journal of Tropical Ecology 19:457464.Google Scholar
KLEINMAN, P. J. A., PIMENTEL, D. & BRYANT, R. B. 1995. The ecological sustainability of slash-and-burn agriculture. Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment 52:235249.Google Scholar
LAWRENCE, D. C., PEART, D. R. & LEIGHTON, M. 1998. The impact of shifting cultivation on a rainforest landscape in West Kalimantan: spatial and temporal dynamics. Landscape Ecology 13:135148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MAYCOCK, C. R. & CONGDON, R. A. 2000. Fine root biomass and soil N and P in north Queensland rain forests. Biotropica 32:185190.Google Scholar
MIRMANTO, E., PROCTOR, J., GREEN, J. J., NAGY, L. & SURIANTATA 1999. Effects of nitrogen and phosphorus fertilisation in a lowland evergreen rain forest. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society Series B – Biological Sciences 354:18251829.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MUTHUKUMAR, T., SHA, L., YANG, X., CAO, M., TANG, J. & ZHENG, Z. 2003. Distribution of roots and arbuscular mycorrhizal associations in tropical forest types of Xishuangbanna, southwest China. Applied Soil Ecology 22:241253.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
NAGY, L. & PROCTOR, J. 1999. Early secondary forest growth after shifting cultivation. Pp. 112 in Sist, P., Sabogal, C. & Byron, Y. (eds.). Management of secondary and logged-over forest in Indonesia. Centre for International Forestry Research, Bogor.Google Scholar
OSTERTAG, R. 1998. Belowground effects of canopy gaps in a lowland tropical wet forest. Ecology 79:12941304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
OSTERTAG, R. 2001. The effects of nitrogen and phosphorus availability on fine root dynamics in Hawaiian montane forests. Ecology 82:485499.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
POWERS, J. S. 2004. Changes in soil carbon and nitrogen after contrasting land-use transitions in northeastern Costa Rica. Ecosystems 7:134146.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
POWERS, J. S., TRESEDER, K. K. & LERDAU, M. T. 2005. Fine roots, arbuscular mycorrhizal hyphae and soil nutrients in four Neotropical rain forests: patterns across large geographical distances. New Phytologist 165:913921.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
PRAJADINATA, S. 1996. Studies on tree regrowth on shifting cultivation sites near Muara Joloi, Central Kalimantan, Indonesia. M.Sc. thesis, University of Stirling, UK.Google Scholar
RAICH, J. W. 1980. Fine roots regrow rapidly after forest felling. Biotropica 12:230231.Google Scholar
REICH, P. B., ELLSWORTH, D. S. & UHL, C. 1995. Leaf carbon and nutrient assimilation and conservation in species of differing successional status in an oligotrophic Amazonian forest. Functional Ecology 9:6576.Google Scholar
SANFORD, R. L. & CUEVAS, E. 1996. Root growth and rhizosphere interactions in tropical forests. Pp. 268300 in Mulkey, S. S., Chazdon, R. L. & Smith, A. P. (eds.). Tropical forest plant ecophysiology. Chapman & Hall, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
SOETHE, N., LEHMANN, J. & ENGELS, C. 2007. Carbon and nutrient stocks in roots of forests at different altitudes in the Ecuadorian Andes. Journal of Tropical Ecology 23:319328.Google Scholar
YAMASHITA, T., KASUYA, N., KADIR, W. R., CHIK, S. W., QUAH, E. S. & OKUDA, T. 2003. Soil and belowground characteristics of Pasoh Forest Reserve. Pp. 89109 in Okuda, T., Manokaran, N., Matsumoto, Y., Niiyama, K., Thomas, S. C. & Ashton, P. S. (eds.). Pasoh: ecology of a lowland rain forest in Southeast Asia. Springer-Verlag, Tokyo.Google Scholar