Analysis of factors influencing variation in soil respiration between forest types : a case study at Bukit Timah Nature Reserve

Tropical forests have been facing rapid degradation in recent decades, which alters pristine primary forest into secondary forests. Despite there being increasing portions of secondary forests, few studies are explaining how rapid degradation of pristine forests influences carbon balance and dynamic...

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Main Author: Chua, Terence Jie
Other Authors: Kelly Andersen
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141401
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1414012023-02-28T16:47:21Z Analysis of factors influencing variation in soil respiration between forest types : a case study at Bukit Timah Nature Reserve Chua, Terence Jie Kelly Andersen Asian School of the Environment kelly.andersen@ntu.edu.sg Science::Biological sciences::Ecology Tropical forests have been facing rapid degradation in recent decades, which alters pristine primary forest into secondary forests. Despite there being increasing portions of secondary forests, few studies are explaining how rapid degradation of pristine forests influences carbon balance and dynamics in a tropical forest. Here we studied the spatial patterns of soil respiration, which is a crucial process influencing terrestrial carbon balance. Our experiment was conducted at 100 measurement locations within a primary and secondary tropical rainforest in Bukit Timah Nature Reserve, Singapore. We aimed to investigate whether soil respiration rates differed between both forest types, and what the underlying abiotic and biotic factors influencing the differences were. We hypothesize that the soil respiration rates in the secondary forest would be higher than that of the primary forest, and that the factors we analyzed positively influence soil respiration rates. Results showed that the soil respiration rates observed in the secondary forest was higher than that of the primary forest. However, none of the tested factors (soil temperature, soil moisture, diameter of trees at breast height, canopy cover) were significantly influencing soil respiration rates. Our findings suggest that the factors tested in our study were not crucial in governing spatial pattern of soil respiration at our site and that other factors such as soil organic carbon content and species composition are more important factors influencing spatial variation of soil respiration between primary and secondary tropical forests. Bachelor of Science in Environmental Earth Systems Science 2020-06-08T05:38:46Z 2020-06-08T05:38:46Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141401 en application/pdf application/vnd.ms-excel application/octet-stream application/octet-stream application/octet-stream application/octet-stream application/octet-stream Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Biological sciences::Ecology
spellingShingle Science::Biological sciences::Ecology
Chua, Terence Jie
Analysis of factors influencing variation in soil respiration between forest types : a case study at Bukit Timah Nature Reserve
description Tropical forests have been facing rapid degradation in recent decades, which alters pristine primary forest into secondary forests. Despite there being increasing portions of secondary forests, few studies are explaining how rapid degradation of pristine forests influences carbon balance and dynamics in a tropical forest. Here we studied the spatial patterns of soil respiration, which is a crucial process influencing terrestrial carbon balance. Our experiment was conducted at 100 measurement locations within a primary and secondary tropical rainforest in Bukit Timah Nature Reserve, Singapore. We aimed to investigate whether soil respiration rates differed between both forest types, and what the underlying abiotic and biotic factors influencing the differences were. We hypothesize that the soil respiration rates in the secondary forest would be higher than that of the primary forest, and that the factors we analyzed positively influence soil respiration rates. Results showed that the soil respiration rates observed in the secondary forest was higher than that of the primary forest. However, none of the tested factors (soil temperature, soil moisture, diameter of trees at breast height, canopy cover) were significantly influencing soil respiration rates. Our findings suggest that the factors tested in our study were not crucial in governing spatial pattern of soil respiration at our site and that other factors such as soil organic carbon content and species composition are more important factors influencing spatial variation of soil respiration between primary and secondary tropical forests.
author2 Kelly Andersen
author_facet Kelly Andersen
Chua, Terence Jie
format Final Year Project
author Chua, Terence Jie
author_sort Chua, Terence Jie
title Analysis of factors influencing variation in soil respiration between forest types : a case study at Bukit Timah Nature Reserve
title_short Analysis of factors influencing variation in soil respiration between forest types : a case study at Bukit Timah Nature Reserve
title_full Analysis of factors influencing variation in soil respiration between forest types : a case study at Bukit Timah Nature Reserve
title_fullStr Analysis of factors influencing variation in soil respiration between forest types : a case study at Bukit Timah Nature Reserve
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of factors influencing variation in soil respiration between forest types : a case study at Bukit Timah Nature Reserve
title_sort analysis of factors influencing variation in soil respiration between forest types : a case study at bukit timah nature reserve
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141401
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