Abstract
Aims In Brazil, cerrado and seasonal forest occur in close proximity but on soils with very different chemistry and texture. We aimed to compare species from these two vegetation types in terms of leaf N and P concentrations (of green and senesced leaves) and proportional nutrient resorption, quantifying the relationships among these traits, with other key leaf traits, and with soil properties. Methods We collected topsoil at 100 25 m2 sample plots in south-eastern Brazil and measured leaf traits of 89 woody species occurring therein, expressing them as community-weighted means. Soil nutrient status was indexed using eight standard variables. Results In terms of properties such as pH, clay content, and cation exchange capacity, cerrado soils were deemed as being less "fertile" than forest soils, yet cerrado and forest sites did not differ in soil total N or available P (which themselves were negatively correlated). On average, forest species showed higher proportional P resorption but lower N resorption. Leaves with higher nutrient concentrations were less scleromorphic. Conclusion In Brazilian cerrado and forests, variation in green- and senesced-leaf nutrients was better aligned with generalised measures of soil fertility than with total N or available P and showed far more clear patterns than nutrient resorption efficiencies.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 13-33 |
| Number of pages | 21 |
| Journal | Plant and Soil |
| Volume | 404 |
| Issue number | 45323 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 2016 |
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