Publications by authors named "Hua-Zheng Lu"

Introduction: Clonal fragmentation helps to assess clonal plants' growth resilience to human and environmental disturbance. Although clonal integration in epiphytes in tropical rubber plantations is important to understand their role in enhancing biodiversity and ecosystem services, research on this subject is limited. These plantations are typically monospecific economic forests that face increased anthropogenic disturbances.

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With the combination of airborne Lidar and panchromatic images in 1981 and 2021, we investigated the canopy height structure of tropical forests in Menglun sub-reserve in the Xishuangbanna National Nature Reserve of Yunnan Province, and analyzed its relationship with environmental factors by using multiple regression tree (MRT) method. The results showed that forests in the Menglun sub-reserve could be clustered into seven types based on canopy height structures, with tropical rainforest, monsoon evergreen broad-leaved forest, secondary forest, and flood plain forest as the main types. The potential solar radiation, altitude, terrain profile curvature, slope and the brightness value of imageries in 1981 and 2021 were main factors that drove the classification.

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Hemiepiphytic figs killing their host trees is an ecological process unique to the tropics. Yet the benefits and adaptive strategies of their special life history remain poorly understood. We compared leaf phosphorus (P) content data of figs and palms worldwide, and functional traits and substrate P content of hemiepiphytic figs (Ficus tinctoria), their host palm and nonhemiepiphytic conspecifics at different growth stages in a common garden.

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  • Source-specific risk assessment for soil heavy metals (HMs) in coal-mining areas is essential for pollution management and risk control.
  • An integrated analysis involving thirty soil samples from a coal-mining city in central China revealed moderate pollution levels, primarily from cadmium (Cd) and mercury (Hg), traced back to four main sources: traffic emissions, industrial activities, agricultural practices, and natural sources.
  • While non-carcinogenic risks were within safe limits for adults and children, identified carcinogenic risks posed a concern, particularly due to contaminants from traffic and natural sources like arsenic (As) and nickel (Ni), indicating a need for proactive risk mitigation strategies.
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Epiphytes in tree canopies make a considerable contribution to the species diversity, aboveground biomass, and nutrient pools in forest ecosystems. However, the nutrient status of epiphytes and their possible adaptations to nutrient deficiencies in the forest canopy remain unclear. Therefore, we analyzed the stoichiometry of five macroelements (C, N, P, K, and Ca) in four taxonomic groups (lichens, bryophytes, ferns, and spermatophytes) to investigate this issue in a subtropical montane moist evergreen broad-leaved forest in Southwest China.

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Few studies have explored how - within the same system - clonality and positive plant-plant interactions might interact to regulate plant community composition. Canopy-dwelling epiphytes in species-rich forests provide an ideal system for studying this because many epiphytic vascular plants undertake clonal growth and because vascular epiphytes colonize canopy habitats after the formation of nonvascular epiphyte (i.e.

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  • Increasing atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition from pollution and land-use changes is negatively impacting biogeochemical cycles, particularly affecting vulnerable epiphytic bryophytes in subtropical montane cloud forests.
  • A 2-year field experiment revealed that N additions at levels of 7.4 kg/ha/year led to significant declines in bryophyte cover, biomass, and photosynthesis, suggesting a critical load (CL) of around 18 kg N/ha/year for these species.
  • The decline is attributed to disrupted cellular carbon metabolism, including inhibited photosynthesis and nutrient leakage, pointing to the detrimental effects of N pollution on bryophyte communities and overall ecosystem health.
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  • Epiphytic bryophytes, which don’t have roots in soil, must adapt to challenging habitats and their nitrogen uptake strategies are not well understood, making it unclear how they fit into the nitrogen cycle.
  • A study conducted in an Asian cloud forest used (15)N labeling to test how these organisms source nitrogen, finding that they obtained more nitrogen from air deposition than from their bark, although bark nitrogen still played a significant role.
  • The research revealed that organic nitrogen, especially from glycine, is a key component of bryophyte nutrition, highlighting the need to consider both organic and bark nitrogen sources when studying the nitrogen cycling roles of epiphytic bryophytes.
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Locally available resources can be shared within clonal plant systems through physiological integration, thus enhancing their survival and growth. Most epiphytes exhibit clonal growth habit, but few studies have tested effects of physiological integration (resource sharing) on survival and growth of epiphytes and whether such effects vary with species. We conducted two experiments, one on individuals (single ramets) and another on groups (several ramets within a plot), with severed and intact rhizome treatments (without and with physiological integration) on two dominant epiphytic ferns (Polypodiodes subamoena and Lepisorus scolopendrium) in a subtropical montane moist forest in Southwest China.

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  • The study investigates how clonal integration affects the survival and growth of the fern Selliguea griffithiana in different habitats.
  • Rhizome disconnection, which prevents resource sharing among connected plants, negatively impacted growth and survival more in epiphytic habitats (forest canopies) compared to terrestrial ones (forest understories).
  • The findings suggest that clonal integration is especially beneficial for facultative epiphytic ferns in more stressful environments, supporting the idea that natural selection favors plants with better resource-sharing abilities in challenging conditions.
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Fan life forms are bryophytes with shoots rising from vertical substratum that branch repeatedly in the horizontal plane to form flattened photosynthetic surfaces, which are well suited for intercepting water from moving air. However, detailed water relations, gas exchange characteristics of fan bryophytes and their adaptations to particular microhabitats remain poorly understood. In this study, we measured and analyzed microclimatic data, as well as water release curves, pressure-volume relationships and photosynthetic water and light response curves for three common fan bryophytes in an Asian subtropical montane cloud forest (SMCF).

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By using trenching method and infrared gas analyzer, this paper studied the seasonal variation of soil respiration (SR), including root respiration (RR) and heterotrophic respiration (HR), in tropical seasonal rain forest (RF) and rubber (Hevea brasiliensis) plantation (RP) in Xishuangbanna of Yunnan, China. The results showed that the SR and HR rates were significantly higher in RF than in RP (P < 0.01), while the RR rate had less difference between the two forests.

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