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Nitrogen and phosphorus enhance growth and luxury consumption of four secondary forest tree species in Borneo

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 November 2001

DEBORAH LAWRENCE
Affiliation:
Botany Department, Duke University, North Carolina 27708-0339, USA Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia, P O Box 400123, Charlottesville, VA 22904-4123, USA Current address. Email: lawrence@virginia.edu

Abstract

Four common fallow tree species were tested for a response to nitrogen and phosphorus fertilization. Seedlings or cuttings of Melicope glabra (Rutaceae), Macaranga gigantea (Euphorbiaceae), Persea romosa (Laureaceae), Peronema canescens (Verbenaceae) were grown in pots of a 50:50 mix of native soil and sand under 18% full sun for 18 weeks. Every 2 weeks, plants received either added N, added P, added N+P, or no added nutrients (control). Persea, a shade-tolerant species, and Macaranga, a light-demanding pioneer, improved relative growth rate with the addition of both N and P. Neither responded to N or P alone. Peronema and Melicope demonstrated luxury consumption of both N and P but did not show enhanced growth. Two of the four species tested (Persea and Melicope) were more limited by P than N. Macaranga was equally limited by both and Peronema was more limited by N. Along with previous studies, evidence for positive growth response and luxury consumption among light-demanding species suggests that P, rather than N, should limit seedling performance and may ultimately influence tree diversity in young secondary tropical forests.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2001 Cambridge University Press

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