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Title: Ecophysiology of a Mangrove Forest in Jobos Bay, Puerto Rico.
Authors: Lugo, A.E.
Medina, E.
Cuevas, E.
Cintron, G.
Laboy Nieves, E.N.
Novelli, Y.S.
USDA, FS
Source: Caribbean journal of science. 2007 Dec., v. 43, no. 2, p. 200-219.
NALT Subjects: mangrove forests
gas exchange
forest litter
nutrient use efficiency
photosynthesis
stomatal conductance
leaf area
salinity
translocation (plant physiology)
vegetation structure
nutrient content
chemical analysis
biogeochemical cycles
forest ecology
Puerto Rico
Issue Date: Dec-2007
Abstract: We studied gas exchange, leaf dimensions, litter production, leaf and litterfall chemistry, nutrient flux to the forest floor, retranslocation rates, and nutrient use efficiency of mangroves in Jobos Bay, Puerto Rico. The fringe forest had a salinity gradient from the ocean (35 per thousand) to a salt flat (100 per thousand) and a basin (about 80 per thousand). Red (Rhizophora mangle), white (Laguncularia racemosa), and black (Avicennia germinans) mangroves were zoned along this gradient. Photosynthetic rates, stomatal conductance, leaf area and weight, leaf specific area, and nutrient use efficiency decreased with increasing salinity, while xylem tension, nutrient retranslocation, and leaf respiration increased with increasing salinity. The concentration of some leaf elements increased with salinity (N, P, Mg, Na) while others decreased (Ca). Leaf specific area was less variable than leaf area or weight. Maximum photosynthesis (12.7 μmol CO2 m-2s-1), leaf conductance (283 mmol CO2 m-2s-1), and litterfall (16.9 Mg ha-1 yr-1) in the fringe were high in comparison with those of other world mangroves. Nutrient flux to the forest floor was also high and nutrient use efficiency was low in this forest. Part of the reason for these high values and low use-efficiencies was the high proportion of nutrient-rich flowers and propagules in litterfall. Nevertheless, access to freshwater in the form of groundwaterdischarge and about 1 m of annual rainfall play a role in the high productivity of the Jobos mangroves.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10113/16512
Appears in Collections:USDA Research and Information

Files in This Item:

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