We demonstrate a significant relationship between leaf attributes and growth rates of mature trees under natural conditions in northern Australia, a pattern that has not been widely reported before in the literature. Increase in diameter at breast height (DBH) was measured every 3 months for 2 years for 21 tree species from four habitats near Darwin: Eucalyptus open forest, mixed woodland, Melaleuca swamp and dry monsoon rainforest. Assimilation rates and foliar chlorophyll, nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations were positively correlated with growth rate and negatively correlated with leaf mass per area. For most species, increases in DBH were confined to the wet-season (summer) period between November and May. Average annual increases in...
Seasonally dry tropical ecosystems occur in the Americas, Africa, India and Australia. They sustain ...
Tree populations in mesic (>650 mm precipitation/yr) savannas of the world have strong demographic b...
Canopy tree populations in mesic savannas are often bimodal with few saplings but many smaller indiv...
2 We demonstrate a significant relationship between leaf attributes and growth rates of mature trees...
Frequent fire is a feature of the mesic Australian savannas, yet little is known about its effect on...
Seasonal variations in carbon assimilation of eight tree species of a north Australian tropical sava...
Daily and seasonal patterns of transpiration were measured in evergreen eucalypt trees growing at a ...
Daily and seasonal patterns of transpiration were measured in evergreen eucalypt trees growing at a ...
Leaf phenology was monitored for 49 woody species (trees and tall shrubs) each month over a 2.5-year...
We examined tree diameter growth in 20 plots subjected to various disturbance intensities (natural, ...
Patterns of leaf attributes were examined for six woody species growing in a eucalypt woodland, a ma...
© 2018 Ecological Society of Australia Plant growth rates strongly determine ecosystem productivity ...
Savanna communities dominate the wet–dry tropical regions of the world and are an important co...
Forest and savanna are the two dominant vegetation types of the tropical regions with very few tree ...
Forest and savanna are the two dominant vegetation types of the tropical regions with very few tree ...
Seasonally dry tropical ecosystems occur in the Americas, Africa, India and Australia. They sustain ...
Tree populations in mesic (>650 mm precipitation/yr) savannas of the world have strong demographic b...
Canopy tree populations in mesic savannas are often bimodal with few saplings but many smaller indiv...
2 We demonstrate a significant relationship between leaf attributes and growth rates of mature trees...
Frequent fire is a feature of the mesic Australian savannas, yet little is known about its effect on...
Seasonal variations in carbon assimilation of eight tree species of a north Australian tropical sava...
Daily and seasonal patterns of transpiration were measured in evergreen eucalypt trees growing at a ...
Daily and seasonal patterns of transpiration were measured in evergreen eucalypt trees growing at a ...
Leaf phenology was monitored for 49 woody species (trees and tall shrubs) each month over a 2.5-year...
We examined tree diameter growth in 20 plots subjected to various disturbance intensities (natural, ...
Patterns of leaf attributes were examined for six woody species growing in a eucalypt woodland, a ma...
© 2018 Ecological Society of Australia Plant growth rates strongly determine ecosystem productivity ...
Savanna communities dominate the wet–dry tropical regions of the world and are an important co...
Forest and savanna are the two dominant vegetation types of the tropical regions with very few tree ...
Forest and savanna are the two dominant vegetation types of the tropical regions with very few tree ...
Seasonally dry tropical ecosystems occur in the Americas, Africa, India and Australia. They sustain ...
Tree populations in mesic (>650 mm precipitation/yr) savannas of the world have strong demographic b...
Canopy tree populations in mesic savannas are often bimodal with few saplings but many smaller indiv...