scholarly journals Growth performance of eucalypts and acacia seedling under elevated CO2 load in the changing environment

2021 ◽  
Vol 918 (1) ◽  
pp. 012030
Author(s):  
E Novriyanti ◽  
M Watanabe ◽  
Q Mao ◽  
K Takayoshi

Abstract Acacia and Eucalypt are important species in the global forest plantations. The resilience of those species under the changing environment would define their significance in the dynamic of forest plantation. This study was aimed to provide information on the growth performance of two acacias and two eucalypts seedlings under elevated CO2 concentrations. The seedlings of A. auriculiformis, A. mangium, E. camadulensis, and E. urophylla were subjected to two levels of CO2 and two levels of nutrient supply in the FACE system in Sapporo Experimental Forest, Japan. The eucalypts showed significantly higher growth performance than the acacias. The nutrient addition significantly increased the growth, yet the CO2 and interaction between CO2 and nutrients were not significantly different. LMA was not significantly affected by the elevated CO2 and nutrient addition. Although nutrients significantly affected the C/N in the eucalypts, they showed no different effect on the acacias. As expected, Nmass and Narea were higher in the acacia than those in the eucalypts, although no significant responses were shown to elevated CO2 and nutrient addition. The tested acacia and eucalypts showed relatively insensitivity to elevated CO2. Thus they might possess resilience capacity under the keep increasing level of the atmospheric CO2 concentration.

2016 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 276-281 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiangyang Huang ◽  
Huiyi Cai ◽  
Guohua Liu ◽  
Haijie Yan ◽  
Wenhuan Chang ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 286 (1913) ◽  
pp. 20191857 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anita Narwani ◽  
Marta Reyes ◽  
Aaron Louis Pereira ◽  
Hannele Penson ◽  
Stuart R. Dennis ◽  
...  

A major challenge in ecology is to understand determinants of ecosystem functioning and stability in the face of disturbance. Some important species can strongly shape community structure and ecosystem functioning, but their impacts and interactions on ecosystem-level responses to disturbance are less well known. Shallow ponds provide a model system in which to study the effects of such species because some taxa mitigate transitions between alternative ecosystem states caused by eutrophication. We performed pond experiments to test how two foundation species (a macrophyte and a mussel) affected the biomass of planktonic primary producers and its stability in response to nutrient additions. Individually, each species reduced phytoplankton biomass and tended to increase rates of recovery from disturbance, but together the species reversed these effects, particularly with larger nutrient additions. This reversal was mediated by high cyanobacterial dominance of the community and a resulting loss of trait evenness. Effects of the foundation species on primary producer biomass were associated with effects on other ecosystem properties, including turbidity and dissolved oxygen. Our work highlights the important role of foundation species and their interactive effects in determining responses of ecosystem functioning to disturbance.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (21) ◽  
pp. 3599
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Vieira Leite ◽  
Carlos Alberto Silva ◽  
Midhun Mohan ◽  
Adrián Cardil ◽  
Danilo Roberti Alves de Almeida ◽  
...  

Fast-growing Eucalyptus spp. forest plantations and their resultant wood products are economically important and may provide a low-cost means to sequester carbon for greenhouse gas reduction. The development of advanced and optimized frameworks for estimating forest plantation attributes from lidar remote sensing data combined with statistical modeling approaches is a step towards forest inventory operationalization and might improve industry efficiency in monitoring and managing forest resources. In this study, we first developed and tested a framework for modeling individual tree attributes in fast-growing Eucalyptus forest plantation using airborne lidar data and linear mixed-effect models (LME) and assessed the gain in accuracy compared to a conventional linear fixed-effects model (LFE). Second, we evaluated the potential of using the tree-level estimates for determining tree attribute uniformity across different stand ages. In the field, tree measurements, such as tree geolocation, species, genotype, age, height (Ht), and diameter at breast height (dbh) were collected through conventional forest inventory practices, and tree-level aboveground carbon (AGC) was estimated using allometric equations. Individual trees were detected and delineated from lidar-derived canopy height models (CHM), and crown-level metrics (e.g., crown volume and crown projected area) were computed from the lidar 3-D point cloud. Field and lidar-derived crown metrics were combined for ht, dbh, and AGC modeling using an LME. We fitted a varying intercept and slope model, setting species, genotype, and stand (alone and nested) as random effects. For comparison, we also modeled the same attributes using a conventional LFE model. The tree attribute estimates derived from the best LME model were used for assessing forest uniformity at the tree level using the Lorenz curves and Gini coefficient (GC). We successfully detected 96.6% of the trees from the lidar-derived CHM. The best LME model for estimating the tree attributes was composed of the stand as a random effect variable, and canopy height, crown volume, and crown projected area as fixed effects. The %RMSE values for tree-level height, dbh, and AGC were 8.9%, 12.1%, and 23.7% for the LFE model and improved to 7.3%, 7.1%, and 13.6%, respectively, for the LME model. Tree attributes uniformity was assessed with the Lorenz curves and tree-level estimations, especially for the older stands. All stands showed a high level of tree uniformity with GC values approximately 0.2. This study demonstrates that accurate detection of individual trees and their associated crown metrics can be used to estimate Ht, dbh, and AGC stocks as well as forest uniformity in fast-growing Eucalyptus plantations forests using lidar data as inputs to LME models. This further underscores the high potential of our proposed approach to monitor standing stock and growth in Eucalyptus—and similar forest plantations for carbon dynamics and forest product planning.


Author(s):  
Jennifer Byrom ◽  
Phyllis Dunn ◽  
Gemma Ferguson ◽  
Simon Leeson ◽  
Charles Redman ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Yudi Fujimoto ◽  
Rudã Fernandes Brandão Santos ◽  
Claucia Aparecida Honorato ◽  
Henrique Malta Dias ◽  
Fabrício Menezes Ramos ◽  
...  

Angelfish (Pterophyllum scalare) is a very important species in Brazil’s domestic market, enjoying feeding managements that differ from fish breeders to aquarists, so the cost of feed and labor become relevant items when cultivating the species. Thus, the objective of this work was to assess feeding frequency and feed deprivation based on growth performance, parasite infestation and cost-benefit in farming the species. The experiment was conducted in a completely randomized design in a 3x2 factorial scheme with 3 daily feeding levels, 4 meals, 2 meals and 1 meal; with and without feed deprivation and two repetitions. Feed deprivation consisted of offering feed 5 days a week only. Considering the performance, we observed that feeding once a day is the management of choice when the objective is maintaining fish weight. Feeding twice a day without deprivation and four times a day with or without feed deprivation resulted in higher growth performance than feeding once a day. Monogenean and nematode loads were not influenced by feeding management. The cost-benefit analysis enabled us to observe that the treatment with the best benefit was the one involving two feedings a day with no deprivation. Thus, considering the parameters mentioned above, we concluded that the treatment consisting of two daily feedings with no feed deprivation is the most adequate for farming this specie.


1996 ◽  
Vol 134 (2) ◽  
pp. 267-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. PFIRRMANN ◽  
J. D. BARNES ◽  
K. STEINER ◽  
P. SCHRAMEL ◽  
U. BUSCH ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 1789-1801
Author(s):  
Jegatheswaran RATNASING ◽  
Hazirah A. LATIB ◽  
Neelakandan PARAMJOTHY ◽  
Lim C. LIAT ◽  
Mathivanan NADARAJAH ◽  
...  

With reducing supply of logs from the sustainably managed natural forest to meet the processing demand of the large wood products industry in Malaysia, plantation forestry has been gaining importance since the early 1970s. Despite the government’s efforts through the provision of financial support and incentives, investments in plantation forestry has been slow. The promising start of the large-scale forest plantation programs in the early 1970s, followed by the 1980s and then the latest program in early 2000, appear to have been a mixed bag of failures and limited success. The rather below-par performance of the forest plantations has been attributed to several factors, such as insufficient good planting stock, poor species-site matching, poor soil quality, pest and diseases and the overall poor silvicultural and management regime laid out for forest plantations. Further, plantation forestry appears to be dominated by larger companies, while small and medium companies, have limited financial resources to overcome the prevailing challenges faced. Despite the poor performance until to date, the adoption of intensive research based silvicultural and management regime for the plantation forests, which are maturing in the next years, will hopefully produce better results and serve as the sunrise for plantation forestry in Malaysia.  


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. A. Hanson ◽  
E. M. Britney ◽  
T. G. Stewart ◽  
A. W. Wolfson ◽  
M. Baker

2007 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Logan ◽  
J. Régnière ◽  
D. R. Gray ◽  
A. S. Munson

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