Increased light-use efficiency sustains net primary productivity of shaded coffee plants in agroforestry system
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Date
08-2017Author
Casanoves, Fernando
Sustainable development goals
ODS 15 - Vida de ecosistemas terrestres
Type
Artículo
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In agroforestry systems, shade trees strongly affect the physiology of the undergrown crop. However, a major paradigm is that the reduction in absorbed photosynthetically active radiation is, to a certain extent, compensated by an increase in light-use efficiency, thereby reducing the difference in net primary productivity between shaded and non-shaded plants. Due to the large spatial heterogeneity in agroforestry systems and the lack of appropriate tools, the combined effects of such variables have seldom been analysed, even though they may help understand physiological processes underlying yield dynamics. In this study, we monitored net primary productivity, during two years, on scales ranging from individual coffee plants to the entire plot. Absorbed radiation was mapped with a 3D model (MAESPA). Light-use efficiency and net assimilation rate were derived for each coffee plant individually.
We found that although irradiance was reduced by 60% below crowns of shade trees, coffee light-use efficiency increased by 50%, leaving net primary productivity fairly stable across all shade levels. Variability of aboveground net primary productivity of coffee plants was caused primarily by the age of the plants and by intraspecific competition among them (drivers usually overlooked in the agroforestry literature) rather than by the presence of shade trees.
Keywords
Café||coffee||café||café, Agroforestería||agroforestry||agrosilvicultura||agroforesterie, Árbol de sombra||shade trees||árvore de sombra||arbre d'ombrage, Productividad primaria||primary productivity||produtividade primária||productivité primaire, Radiación fotosinteticamente activa, Competencia intraespecífica, Carbon allocation, Coffea arabica||Coffea arabica||Coffea arabica||Coffea arabica, Light absorption model, Maespa, Net assimilation rate (nar),
Delegation
Sede Central
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Is part of
Plant, Cell & Environment
Status
openAccess
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-uri-link
https://doi.org/10.1111/pce.12964

