Publications by authors named "Norma Salinas Revilla"

Article Synopsis
  • Understanding how photosynthesis, plant growth, and energy use work together is important for figuring out how forests will change with climate change.
  • The study looked at ten different forest sites in the Amazon and found that while water affects how much plants grow, it doesn't always explain why some forests are more productive than others.
  • The research suggests that other factors, like how long trees live and how much carbon they use, are even more important for understanding forest growth and carbon storage.
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The functional role of herbivores in tropical rainforests remains poorly understood. We quantified the magnitude of, and underlying controls on, carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus cycled by invertebrate herbivory along a 2800 m elevational gradient in the tropical Andes spanning 12°C mean annual temperature. We find, firstly, that leaf area loss is greater at warmer sites with lower foliar phosphorus, and secondly, that the estimated herbivore-mediated flux of foliar nitrogen and phosphorus from plants to soil via leaf area loss is similar to, or greater than, other major sources of these nutrients in tropical forests.

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A better understanding of the mechanisms controlling the magnitude and sign of carbon components in tropical forest ecosystems is important for reliable estimation of this important regional component of the global carbon cycle. We used the JULES vegetation model to simulate all components of the carbon balance at six sites along an Andes-Amazon transect across Peru and Brazil and compared the results to published field measurements. In the upper montane zone the model predicted a lack of forest vegetation, indicating a need for better parameterization of the responses of cloud forest vegetation within the model.

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