Water potential gradients for gaps and slopes in a Panamanian tropical moist forest's dry season

Abstract
Soil water potentials were measured weekly by psychrometers at 20 cm depth during the dry season in a tropical moist forest on Barro Colorado Island, Panama. There was a persistent gradient of decreasing soil moisture from gap centre to gap edge to adjacent understorey at both a large and a small gap. On both a north-south and an east-west transect, the soil was drier (water potentials were more negative) on an upland surface than on moderate slopes. This trend was reflected in the predawn, total water potentials of shallow-rootedPsychotria horizontalisand deep-rootedTrichilia tuberculatameasured in the understorey during the last two months of the dry season.P. horizontalisfrom the wettest sites on the transects had higher osmotic potentials at full hydration and at zero turgor, indicating less drought resistance than for conspecifics from the driest sites.

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