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Height and crown allometries and their relationship with functional traits: An example from a subtropical wet forest
Yang, Jie; Swenson, Nathan G.
2023
Source PublicationECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
ISSN2045-7758
Volume13Issue:2Pages:e9804
Abstract

Forest tree communities are largely structured by interactions between phenotypes and their environments. Functional traits have been popularized as providing key insights into plant functional tradeoffs. Similarly, tree crown-stem diameter and tree height-stem diameter allometric relationships are likely to be strongly coordinated with functional trait tradeoff axes. Specifically, species with functional traits indicative of conservative strategies (i.e., dense wood, heavy seeds) should be related to tree architectures that have lower heights and wider crowns for a given stem diameter. For example, shade-tolerant species in tropical forests are typically characterized as having dense wood, large seeds, and relatively broad crowns at early ontogenetic stages. Here, we focus on 14 dominant dicot tree species in a tropical forest. We utilized hierarchical Bayesian models to characterize species-specific height and crown size allometric parameters. We sampled from the posterior distributions for these parameters and correlated them with six functional traits. We also characterize the expected height and crown size for a series of reference stem diameters to quantify the relationship between traits and tree architecture across size classes. We find little interspecific variation in allometric slopes, but clear variation in allometric intercepts. Allometeric height intercepts were negatively correlated with wood density and crown size intercepts were positively related to wood density and seed mass and negatively related to leaf percent phosphorus. Thus, interspecific variation in tree architecture is generated by interspecific variation in allometric intercepts and not slopes. These intercepts could be predicted using a handful of functional traits where conservative traits were indicative of trees that are relatively short and have larger crown sizes. This demonstrates a coordination of tropical tree life histories that can be characterized simultaneously with functional traits and tree allometries.

Keywordallocation diameter-crown allometry diameter-height allometry functional ecology tropical forest
Subject AreaEcology ; Evolutionary Biology
DOI10.1002/ece3.9804
Indexed BySCI
Language英语
WOS IDWOS:000930911000001
Citation statistics
Document Type期刊论文
Identifierhttps://ir.xtbg.ac.cn/handle/353005/13663
Collection森林生态研究组
Affiliation1.Chinese Acad Sci, Key Lab Trop Forest Ecol, Xishuangbanna Trop Bot Garden, Kunming, Peoples R China
2.Swenson, Nathan G.] Univ Notre Dame, Dept Biol Sci, Notre Dame, IN USA
3.Swenson, Nathan G.] Univ Notre Dame, Dept Biol Sci, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Yang, Jie,Swenson, Nathan G.. Height and crown allometries and their relationship with functional traits: An example from a subtropical wet forest[J]. ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION,2023,13(2):e9804.
APA Yang, Jie,&Swenson, Nathan G..(2023).Height and crown allometries and their relationship with functional traits: An example from a subtropical wet forest.ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION,13(2),e9804.
MLA Yang, Jie,et al."Height and crown allometries and their relationship with functional traits: An example from a subtropical wet forest".ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION 13.2(2023):e9804.
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