Carbon accumulation and nitrogen pool recovery during transitions from savanna to forest in central Brazil.

@article{Pellegrini2014CarbonAA,
  title={Carbon accumulation and nitrogen pool recovery during transitions from savanna to forest in central Brazil.},
  author={Adam F. A. Pellegrini and William A. Hoffmann and Augusto C{\'e}sar Franco},
  journal={Ecology},
  year={2014},
  volume={95 2},
  pages={
          342-52
        }
}
The expansion of tropical forest into savanna may potentially be a large carbon sink, but little is known about the patterns of carbon sequestration during transitional forest formation. Moreover, it is unclear how nutrient limitation, due to extended exposure to fire-driven nutrient losses, may constrain carbon accumulation. Here, we sampled plots that spanned a woody biomass gradient from savanna to transitional forest in response to differential fire protection in central Brazil. These plots… 

Figures and Tables from this paper

Fire alters ecosystem carbon and nutrients but not plant nutrient stoichiometry or composition in tropical savanna
Fire and nutrients interact to influence the global distribution and dynamics of the savanna biome, but the results of these interactions are both complex and poorly known. A critical but unresolved
Carbon cycle processes in tropical savannas of far North Queensland, Australia
Tropical savannas represent a diverse range of heterogenous ecosystems that play an important role in the global carbon cycle as they occupy approximately one fifth of the land surface. Despite their
Trade-offs between savanna woody plant diversity and carbon storage in the Brazilian Cerrado.
TLDR
Although woody encroachment in savanna ecosystems may provide substantial carbon benefits, it comes at the rapidly accruing cost of woody plant species adapted to the open savanna environment, and the dependence of carbon-diversity trade-offs on the amount of savanna area remaining requires land managers to carefully consider local conditions.
Sensitivity of woody carbon stocks to bark investment strategy in Neotropical savannas and forests
Abstract. Fire frequencies are changing in Neotropical savannas and forests as a result of forest fragmentation and increasing drought. Such changes in fire regime and climate are hypothesized to
Shifts in functional traits elevate risk of fire-driven tree dieback in tropical savanna and forest biomes.
TLDR
This work quantifies how bark thickness determines the ability of individual tree species to tolerate fire and determines the fire sensitivity of ecosystem carbon across 180 plots in savannas and forests throughout the 2.2-million km(2) Cerrado region in Brazil.
Fire frequency drives decadal changes in soil carbon and nitrogen and ecosystem productivity
TLDR
Analysis of data from 48 sites in savanna grasslands, broadleaf forests and needleleaf forests spanning up to 65 years finds that frequently burned plots experienced a decline in surface soil carbon and nitrogen that was non-saturating through time, and predicts that the long-term losses of soil nitrogen that result from more frequent burning may in turn decrease the carbon that is sequestered by net primary productivity.
Top-down and bottom-up controls on soil carbon and nitrogen cycling with repeated burning across four ecosystems
Fires shape the biogeochemistry and functioning of many ecosystems, but fire frequencies are changing across large areas of the globe. Frequent fires can change soil carbon (C) and nitrogen (N)
Conservation with elevated elephant densities sequesters carbon in soils despite losses of woody biomass.
TLDR
It is found that increasing elephant densities resulted in a loss of tree carbon storage by 6.4 t ha-1, but increasing elephant density does not necessarily lead to a negative C footprint, as soil carbon sequestration and transient C storage in dung almost compensate for losses in tree biomass.
Nutrient limitation in tropical savannas across multiple scales and mechanisms.
TLDR
The ability of nutrients to control transitions emerges at individual and landscape scales, and is regulated through different mechanisms based on spatial (differences in underlying geology, temporal and biological) and biological (species traits and community composition) variability.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 45 REFERENCES
CARBON AND NUTRIENT ACCUMULATION IN SECONDARY FORESTS REGENERATING ON PASTURES IN CENTRAL AMAZONIA
Over the past three decades, large expanses of forest in the Amazon Basin were converted to pasture, many of which later degraded to woody fallows and were abandoned. While the majority of tropical
Ecosystem carbon loss with woody plant invasion of grasslands
TLDR
A clear negative relationship between precipitation and changes in soil organic carbon and nitrogen content when grasslands were invaded by woody vegetation is found, with drier sites gaining, and wetter sites losing, soilorganic carbon.
Effects of Nutrient Limitation on Aboveground Carbon Dynamics during Tropical Dry Forest Regeneration in Yucatán, Mexico
TLDR
The hypothesis that there is nutrient limitation during tropical dry forest regeneration is supported and it is shown that it may be maintained in the long term during secondary succession.
NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS LIMITATION OF BIOMASS GROWTH IN A TROPICAL SECONDARY FOREST
Understanding secondary successional processes in Amazonian terrestrial ecosystems is becoming increasingly important as continued deforestation expands the area that has become secondary forest, or
Recuperation of nitrogen cycling in Amazonian forests following agricultural abandonment
TLDR
The patterns of N and P cycling during secondary forest succession are similar to N- and P-cycling patterns during primary succession as soils age over thousands and millions of years, thus revealing that N availability in terrestrial ecosystems is ephemeral and can be disrupted by either natural or anthropogenic disturbances at several timescales.
Productivity and carbon fluxes of tropical savannas
Aim (1) To estimate the local and global magnitude of carbon fluxes between savanna and the atmosphere, and to suggest the significance of savannas in the global carbon cycle. (2) To suggest the
Expansion of gallery forests into central Brazilian savannas
Upland tropical forests have expanded and contracted in response to past climates, but it is not clear whether similar dynamics were exhibited by gallery (riparian) forests within savanna biomes.
NUTRIENT LOSS AND REDISTRIBUTION AFTER FOREST CLEARING ON A HIGHLY WEATHERED SOIL IN AMAZONIA
Over the past three decades, tropical forest clearing and burning have greatly altered the Amazonian landscape by increasing the cover of pastures and secondary forests. The alteration of
A climate-driven switch in plant nitrogen acquisition within tropical forest communities
TLDR
The apparent community-wide flexibility in nitrogen uptake suggests that diverse species within tropical forests can physiologically track changes in nitrogen cycling caused by climate change.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...