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- Müller, Robert;
- Elsenbeer, Helmut;
- Turner, Benjamin L.
WEB OF SCIENCE
1SCOPUS
1초록
Soil phosphorus (P) partitioning could contribute to species diversity and structure in plant communities, but field-scale evidence for P partitioning remains scarce. We hypothesized that the presence of P partitioning could be inferred from statistical associations between the spatial distributions of plants and chemical forms of bioavailable soil P. We investigated this in a diverse tropical tree community on Barro Colorado Island, Panama. We quantified potentially bioavailable forms of soil P by extraction in 2 mM citric acid followed by treatment with phosphatase enzymes. We then linked these P forms to the distribution of 189 tree species in a 50 ha forest dynamics plot by testing species–P associations against null models of random dispersal. We found that 20% of tree species were significantly ((Formula presented.) = 0.05) associated with the depletion of at least one soil organic P fraction, although around half of these associations might be false rejections of the null hypothesis due to type I error. Species in the Fabaceae (legumes), which are known to express high rates of phosphatase in their roots, were most frequently associated with soil P fractions. We interpret our findings as evidence of widespread P partitioning at the community scale, affecting a relatively small proportion of tree species in this moderately fertile forest. We predict that stronger evidence of partitioning will be found at sites with lower P availability. © 2024 by the authors.
키워드
- 제목
- Evidence for Soil Phosphorus Resource Partitioning in a Diverse Tropical Tree Community
- 저자
- Müller, Robert; Elsenbeer, Helmut; Turner, Benjamin L.
- 발행일
- 2024-02
- 유형
- Article
- 저널명
- Forests
- 권
- 15
- 호
- 2