Contrasting patterns of carbon sequestration between Gilbertiodendron dewevrei monodominant forests and Scorodophloeus zenkeri mixed forests in the Central Congo basin

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Full text at PDC

Publication date

2016

Advisors (or tutors)

Editors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer
Citations
Google Scholar

Citation

Cassart, B., Angbonga Basia, A., Titeux, H. et al. Contrasting patterns of carbon sequestration between Gilbertiodendron dewevrei monodominant forests and Scorodophloeus zenkeri mixed forests in the Central Congo basin. Plant Soil 414, 309–326 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11104-016-3130-8

Abstract

Aims Gilbertiodendron dewevrei (De Wild.) J.Léonard monodominant forests (MOF) and Scorodophloeus zenkeri Harms mixed forests (MIF) frequently co-occur on similar soil conditions in the Central Congo basin. Although tree species composition is known to impact C storage, the patterns of C sequestration between those contrasted forest types as well as the associated drivers remain unknown. Methods Annual litterfall, as well as soil (forest floor and mineral soil down to 220 cm depth) organic C (SOC) and aboveground C (AGC) stocks were investigated in MIF and MOF located on highly weathered sandy soils in the Yoko Reserve (DRC). Results The annual leaf litterfall was similar under both forests but litterfall quality in MOF strongly differed by a set of traits related to organic matter recalcitrance. The SOC stock down to 220 cm was 55% higher under MOF compared to MIF, and the differences between forests remained significant down to 100 cm. While the combined SOC and AGC stocks were similar in both forests, the SOC stocks accounted for ca. 19 and 33% of the total C stocks in MIF and MOF, respectively. Conclusions Because of similar litterfall C inputs, we conclude that the greater SOC accumulation under G. dewevrei results from a limitation of the decomposition rate, in agreement with the traits of the corresponding leaf litter.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Description

Acknowledgments Benoît Cassart obtained a PhD grant from the ‘Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique’ (FNRS-FRIA), and received additional support for field work and laboratory analyses from a joint WBI-ERAIFT grant. Albert Angbonga Basia was funded by the ‘AFORCO – Appui à l’organisation d’un master en aménagement forestier pour le renforcement des capacités des chercheurs congolais en vue de la relance socio-économique de la République Démocratique du Congo’ project, funded by the ‘Commission Universitaire au Développement’ (CUD, ARES-CCD) and coordinated by Prof. Jan Bogaert (ULg – Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech). Enrique Andivia was partly funded by a post-doctoral Marie Curie incoming fellowship.

Keywords

Collections