The morphology and phosphorus concentration drive the leaf carbon
capture and economic trait variations in subtropical bamboo forest
Abstract
Carbon absorption capability and morphological traits are crucial for
plant leaf function performance. Here, we investigated the five bamboos
at different elevations to clarify how the leaf trait responds to the
elevational gradient, and drive the photosynthetic capacity variations.
We selected five bamboo species located along different elevations in
Wuyi Mountain, southeastern China. The Standardized Major Axis
Regression (SMA) analyses and the Structural Equation Model (SEM) are
applied to identify how the bamboo leaf trait, including the ratio of
leaf length to width (W/L), leaf mass per area (LMA), photosynthesis
rates (Pn), leaf nitrogen, and phosphorus concentration (Nmass and
Pmass) response to elevation environment, and the driving mechanism of
Pn changes. Across the five bamboo species, our results revealed the
Pmass of Phyllostachys edulis and Oligostachyum oedogonatum decreased
with increasing elevation, but the Nmass, and LMA of Indocalamus
tessellatus increased. Besides, the Pmass scaled isometrically with
respect to W/L, the Nmass scaled allometrically as the 0.80-power of
Pmass, and Nmass and Pmass scaled allometrically to Pn, with the
exponents of 0.58 and 0.73, respectively. The SEM result showed
altitude, morphological trait (W/L and LMA), and physiological trait
(Nmass and Pmass) could together explain the 44% variations of Pn, with
a standard total effect value of 70.0%, 38.5%, 23.6% to Pmass, Nmass,
and W/L, respectively. The five bamboo species along the different
elevational share an isometric scaling relationship between their Pmass
and W/L, providing partial support for the general rule and operating
between morphological and physiological traits. The scaling relationship
between Pmass and W/L is insensitive to elevation and species. Further,
the leaf W/L and Pmass as the main trait that affects leaf area and P
utilization in growth and thus drives bamboo leaf photosynthetic
capacity variations in different elevations.