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Determining ecosystem functioning in Brazilian biomes through foliar carbon and nitrogen concentrations and stable isotope ratios. / Martinelli, Luiz Antonio; Nardoto, Gabriela B.; Soltangheisi, Amin et al.
In: Biogeochemistry, Vol. 154, 03.11.2020, p. 405-423.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Martinelli, LA, Nardoto, GB, Soltangheisi, A, Reis, CR, Abdalla-Filho, AL, Camargo, PB, Domingues, TF, Faria, D, Figuera, AM, Gomes, TF, Lins, SRM, Mardegan, SF, Mariano, E, Miatto, RC, Moraes, R, Moreira, MZ, Oliveira, RS, Ometto, JPHB, Santos, FLS, Sena-Souza, J, Silva, DML, Silva, JCSS & Vieira, SA 2020, 'Determining ecosystem functioning in Brazilian biomes through foliar carbon and nitrogen concentrations and stable isotope ratios', Biogeochemistry, vol. 154, pp. 405-423. <https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10533-020-00714-2>

APA

Martinelli, L. A., Nardoto, G. B., Soltangheisi, A., Reis, C. R., Abdalla-Filho, A. L., Camargo, P. B., Domingues, T. F., Faria, D., Figuera, A. M., Gomes, T. F., Lins, S. R. M., Mardegan, S. F., Mariano, E., Miatto, R. C., Moraes, R., Moreira, M. Z., Oliveira, R. S., Ometto, J. P. H. B., Santos, F. L. S., ... Vieira, S. A. (2020). Determining ecosystem functioning in Brazilian biomes through foliar carbon and nitrogen concentrations and stable isotope ratios. Biogeochemistry, 154, 405-423. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10533-020-00714-2

CBE

Martinelli LA, Nardoto GB, Soltangheisi A, Reis CR, Abdalla-Filho AL, Camargo PB, Domingues TF, Faria D, Figuera AM, Gomes TF, et al. 2020. Determining ecosystem functioning in Brazilian biomes through foliar carbon and nitrogen concentrations and stable isotope ratios. Biogeochemistry. 154:405-423.

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Martinelli LA, Nardoto GB, Soltangheisi A, Reis CR, Abdalla-Filho AL, Camargo PB et al. Determining ecosystem functioning in Brazilian biomes through foliar carbon and nitrogen concentrations and stable isotope ratios. Biogeochemistry. 2020 Nov 3;154:405-423.

Author

Martinelli, Luiz Antonio ; Nardoto, Gabriela B. ; Soltangheisi, Amin et al. / Determining ecosystem functioning in Brazilian biomes through foliar carbon and nitrogen concentrations and stable isotope ratios. In: Biogeochemistry. 2020 ; Vol. 154. pp. 405-423.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Determining ecosystem functioning in Brazilian biomes through foliar carbon and nitrogen concentrations and stable isotope ratios

AU - Martinelli, Luiz Antonio

AU - Nardoto, Gabriela B.

AU - Soltangheisi, Amin

AU - Reis, Cristiano R.

AU - Abdalla-Filho, Adibe L.

AU - Camargo, P.B.

AU - Domingues, T.F.

AU - Faria, D.

AU - Figuera, A.M.

AU - Gomes, T.F.

AU - Lins, S.R.M.

AU - Mardegan, S.F.

AU - Mariano, E.

AU - Miatto, R.C.

AU - Moraes, R.

AU - Moreira, M.Z.

AU - Oliveira, R.S.

AU - Ometto, J.P.H.B.

AU - Santos, F.L.S.

AU - Sena-Souza, J.

AU - Silva, D.M.L.

AU - Silva, J.C.S.S.

AU - Vieira, Simone Aparecida

PY - 2020/11/3

Y1 - 2020/11/3

N2 - By analyzing 6,480 tree leaf samples from 57 sites within Brazilian biomes, we considered whether vegetation types in terrestrial ecosystems reflect biogeochemical diversity and whether they fit into a leaf economics spectrum (LES). To achieve this, we investigated the relations among leaf carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) concentrations, their isotope natural abundance and C:N ratio. In addition, we tested their correlations with mean annual temperature (MAT) and precipitation (MAP), as climatic factors. We found consistent differences in the C and N concentrations and their isotopic composition among the vegetation types. MAP is the main climatic driver of changes in N, C:N ratio, δ15N, and δ13C, correlating negatively with N and positively with C:N ratio. These relations show that these biomes follow an LES. The Caatinga had the highest δ15N values, suggesting that N residence time in soil is longer due to low leaching and plant uptake. We observed that MAP is not the only factor influencing δ13C values in different biomes; instead canopy effect probably explains the highest values observed in the Cerrado. Our results reinforce earlier findings that life diversity in the tropics reflects biogeochemistry diversity and leaf δ15N opens the possibility for investigating plant trade-offs dictated by the LES. Finally, we expect our findings to contribute to a better understanding of the tropics in global climate models.

AB - By analyzing 6,480 tree leaf samples from 57 sites within Brazilian biomes, we considered whether vegetation types in terrestrial ecosystems reflect biogeochemical diversity and whether they fit into a leaf economics spectrum (LES). To achieve this, we investigated the relations among leaf carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) concentrations, their isotope natural abundance and C:N ratio. In addition, we tested their correlations with mean annual temperature (MAT) and precipitation (MAP), as climatic factors. We found consistent differences in the C and N concentrations and their isotopic composition among the vegetation types. MAP is the main climatic driver of changes in N, C:N ratio, δ15N, and δ13C, correlating negatively with N and positively with C:N ratio. These relations show that these biomes follow an LES. The Caatinga had the highest δ15N values, suggesting that N residence time in soil is longer due to low leaching and plant uptake. We observed that MAP is not the only factor influencing δ13C values in different biomes; instead canopy effect probably explains the highest values observed in the Cerrado. Our results reinforce earlier findings that life diversity in the tropics reflects biogeochemistry diversity and leaf δ15N opens the possibility for investigating plant trade-offs dictated by the LES. Finally, we expect our findings to contribute to a better understanding of the tropics in global climate models.

M3 - Article

VL - 154

SP - 405

EP - 423

JO - Biogeochemistry

JF - Biogeochemistry

SN - 0168-2563

ER -