Performance trade-offs among tropical tree seedlings in contrasting microhabitats
TL;DR: It is suggested that ontogenetic trade-offs, in concert with microhabitat and fitness component trade-off, may contribute to species coexistence of long-lived organisms such as tropical trees.
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Abstract: We investigated performance trade-offs among seedlings of nine tropical tree species during a five-year field experiment. Seedlings were grown in eight microhabitat types composed of paired gap and shaded understory sites in each of four soil types. We defined performance trade-offs relevant to coexistence as significant pairwise rank reversals for species performance between contrasting situations, of which we characterize three types: microhabitat, fitness component, and ontogenetic. Only 2 of 36 species pairs exhibited microhabitat trade-offs or reversed rankings for survival or relative growth rate (RGR) among microhabitats, and only one species pair reversed performance ranks among soil types. We found stronger evidence for rank reversals between fitness components (survival and RGR), particularly in gap vs. understory environments, suggesting a general trade-off between shade tolerance (survival in shade) and gap establishment (RGR in gaps). Third, the most frequent rank reversals between species pairs occurred between early and later ontogenetic stages, especially between fitness components in contrasting microhabitats. Overall, 15 of 36 pairs of potentially competing species exhibited some type of seedling performance trade-off, two species pairs never outperformed one another, and for 19 species pairs one species was a consistent better performer. We suggest that ontogenetic trade-offs, in concert with microhabitat and fitness component trade-offs, may contribute to species coexistence of long-lived organisms such as tropical trees.
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Citations
Carbohydrate storage enhances seedling shade and stress tolerance in a neotropical forest
Jonathan Myers,Kaoru Kitajima +1 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that carbohydrate storage in stems and roots enhances long-term survival in shade by enabling seedlings to cope with periods of biotic and abiotic stress.
Performance of seedlings of Mediterranean woody species under experimental gradients of irradiance and water availability: trade-offs and evidence for niche differentiation.
TL;DR: Evidence is found of some of the trade-offs previously reported for non-Mediterranean plant communities, such as between survival in the shade and relative growth rate (RGR) at high light, but no evidence for others.
227
Assessing foliar chlorophyll contents with the SPAD-502 chlorophyll meter: a calibration test with thirteen tree species of tropical rainforest in French Guiana
Sabrina Coste,Christopher Baraloto,Céline Leroy,Eric Marcon,Amélie Renaud,Andrew D. Richardson,Jean-Christophe Roggy,Heidy Schimann,Johan Uddling,Bruno Hérault +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, leaves of 13 tree species from the tropical rain forest in French Guiana were sampled to select the most appropriate calibration model among the often-used linear, polynomial and exponential models, in addition to a novel homographic model that has a natural asymptote.
Leaf traits show different relationships with shade tolerance in moist versus dry tropical forests.
TL;DR: For forests differing in rainfall seasonality, there is a shift in the relative importance of functional leaf traits and performance trade-offs that control light partitioning, whereas in the seasonally deciduous forest leaf traits underlying the growth trade-off between low and high light might become important.
212
Seed mass, seedling size and neotropical tree seedling establishment
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that seed size influences performance within and among species in part because of indirect effects of initial seedling size and suggest that traits tightly correlated with seed mass at the species level, such as specific leaf area, leaf longevity and photosynthetic capacity, may also contribute to interspecific performance differences.
References
Response to phosphorus supply of tropical tree seedlings: a comparison between a pioneer species Tapirira obtusa and a climax species Lecythis corrugata
TL;DR: Investigation of growth and distribution of biomass and P in response to P-supply of a pioneer and a climax tree species found that L. corrugata is capable of re-translocating P from the hypocotyl, this storage of P has ecological advantages for long-term survival, which might be important under low light conditions.
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Performance tradeoffs across resource gradients in anuran larvae.
Luis Schiesari
- 01 Jan 2004
28
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