Author

Falster, Daniel S.

Duursma, Remko A.

Ishihara, Masae I.

Barneche, Diego R.

FitzJohn, Richard G.

Vårhammar, Angelica

Aiba, Mashiro

Ando, Makoto

Anten, Niels P. R.

Aspinwall, Michael J.

Baltzer, Jennifer L.

Baraloto, Christopher

Battaglia, Michael

Battles, John J.

Bond-Lamberty, Ben

Breugel, Michiel van

Camac, James

Claveau, Yves

Coll Mir, Lluís

Dannoura, Masako

Delagrange, Sylvain

Domec, Jean-Christophe

Fatemi, Farrah

Feng, Wang

Gargaglione, Veronica

Goto, Yoshiaki

Hagihara, Akio

Hall, Jefferson S.

Hamilton, Steve

Harja, Degi

Hiura, Tsutom

Holdaway, Robert

Hutley, Lindsay B.

Ichie, Tomoaki

Jokela, Eric J.

Kantola, Anu

Kelly, Jeff W.

Kenzo, Tanaka

King, David

Kloeppel, Brian D.

Komiyama, Akira

Laclau, Jean-Paul

Lusk, Christopher H.

Maguire, Douglas A.

Maire, Guerric le

Mäkelä, Annikki

Markesteijn, Lars

Marshall, John

McCulloh, Katherine

Miyata, Itsuo

Mokany, Karel

Mori, Shigeta

Myster, Randall W.

Nagano, Masahiro

Naidu, Shawna L.

Nouvellon, Yann

O'Grady, Anthony P.

O'Hara, Kevin L. (Kevin Laughlin)

Ohtsuka, Toshiyuki

Osada, Noriyuki

Osunkoya, Olusegun O.

Peri, Pablo L.

Petritan, Any Mary

Poorter, Lourens

Portsmuth, Angelika

Potvin, Catherine

Ransijn, Johannes

Reid, Douglas

Ribeiro, Sabina C.

Roberts, Scott D.

Rodríguez, Rolando

Saldaña-Acosta, Angela

Santa Regina Rodriguez, Ignacio

Sasa, Kaichiro

Selaya, N. Galia

Sillett, Stephen C.

Sterck, Frank

Takagi, Kentaro

Tange, Takeshi

Tanouchi, Hiroyuki

Tissue, David T.

Umehara, Toru

Utsugi, Hajime

Vadeboncoeur, Matthew A.

Valladares, Fernando

Vanninen, Petteri

Wang, Jian R.

Wenk, Elizabeth

Williams, Richard J.

Ximenes, Fabiano de Aquino

Yamaba, Atsushi

Yamada, Toshihiro

Yamakura, Takuo

Yanai, Ruth D.

York, Robert A.

Publication date

2019-10-08T16:41:28Z

2019-10-08T16:41:28Z

2015

2019-10-08T16:41:28Z



Abstract

Understanding how plants are constructed i.e., how key size dimensions and the amount of mass invested in different tissues varies among individuals is essential for modeling plant growth, carbon stocks, and energy fluxes in the terrestrial biosphere. Allocation patterns can differ through ontogeny, but also among coexisting species and among species adapted to different environments. While a variety of models dealing with biomass allocation exist, we lack a synthetic understanding of the underlying processes. This is partly due to the lack of suitable data sets for validating and parameterizing models. To that end, we present the Biomass And Allometry Database (BAAD) for woody plants. The BAAD contains 259 634 measurements collected in 176 different studies, from 21 084 individuals across 678 species. Most of these data come from existing publications. However, raw data were rarely made public at the time of publication. Thus, the BAAD contains data from different studies, transformed into standard units and variable names. The transformations were achieved using a common workflow for all raw data files. Other features that distinguish the BAAD are: (i) measurements were for individual plants rather than stand averages; (ii) individuals spanning a range of sizes were measured; (iii) plants from 0.01-100 m in height were included; and (iv) biomass was estimated directly, i.e., not indirectly via allometric equations (except in very large trees where biomass was estimated from detailed sub‐sampling). We included both wild and artificially grown plants. The data set contains the following size metrics: total leaf area; area of stem cross‐section including sapwood, heartwood, and bark; height of plant and crown base, crown area, and surface area; and the dry mass of leaf, stem, branches, sapwood, heartwood, bark, coarse roots, and fine root tissues. We also report other properties of individuals (age, leaf size, leaf mass per area, wood density, nitrogen content of leaves and wood), as well as information about the growing environment (location, light, experimental treatment, vegetation type) where available. It is our hope that making these data available will improve our ability to understand plant growth, ecosystem dynamics, and carbon cycling in the world's vegetation.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Allometric equations; Biomass allocation; Biomass partitioning; Plant allometry; Plant traits; Biomassa; Cicle del carboni (Biogeoquímica); Biomass; Carbon cycle (Biogeochemistry)

Publisher

Ecological Society of America

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1890/14-1889.1

Ecology, 2015, vol. 96, num. 5, p. 1445

Rights

(c) Ecological Society of America, 2015

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