Field measurements of gas exchange were made using a portable infra-red gas analyser on six species of early-successional woody plants in Singapore. Macaranga heynei, Mallotus paniculatus and Trema tomentosa grow on relatively fertile soils. Adinandra dumosa, Uillenia suffruticosa and Melostoma malabalhricum are species typical of extremely acidic and infertile soils. The six species were similar in their photosynthetic responses to irradiance when net photosynthetic rate (P^) was expressed on a leaf area basis. However, when PN was converted to a rate per unit leaf dry mass, the fertile soil species showed higher rates of dark respiration and photosynthesis. No difference in water use efficiency between the two sets of species was found.