Coordination of leaf, stem and root traits in determining seedling mortality in a subtropical forest

被引:28
|
作者
Shen, Yong [1 ]
Umana, Maria Natalia [2 ]
Li, Wenbin [1 ]
Fang, Miao [1 ]
Chen, Yuxin [1 ]
Lu, Huanping [3 ]
Yu, Shixiao [1 ]
机构
[1] Sun Yat Sen Univ, State Key Lab Biocontrol, Sch Life Sci, Dept Ecol, Guangzhou 510275, Guangdong, Peoples R China
[2] Yale Univ, Sch Forestry & Environm Studies, New Haven, CT 06511 USA
[3] Guangdong Ecol Meteorol Ctr, Guangzhou 510080, Guangdong, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Forest dynamics; Permanent plots; Plant economics spectrum; Plant strategies; Vital rates; PLANT ECONOMICS SPECTRUM; ARBUSCULAR MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI; FUNCTIONAL TRAITS; DEMOGRAPHIC RATES; WOOD DENSITY; LIFE-SPAN; TREE; COMMUNITY; GROWTH; TEMPERATE;
D O I
10.1016/j.foreco.2019.05.032
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
Plant traits from different organs are thought to be coordinated to achieve main vital functions. However, evidence on how the coordination of traits affect plant vital rates (e.g. mortality rates) is rare due to the poor representation of root traits, which play important roles in water and soil nutrients uptake. In this study, we collected plant traits from 13,733 seedlings of 57 species across 10-year monitoring in a subtropical forest in Southern China, asking whether traits from root and aboveground organs are coordinated, and whether they have consistent effects on seedling mortality (e.g. all fast resource-acquisitive traits reduce mortality). We performed phylogenetic principal component analysis (PPCA) to test trait coordination and used generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs) to examine trait-mortality relationships. We found that some of the root and aboveground traits were highly correlated. PPCA of traits separated species to the strategy of resource acquisition or conservation, supporting the plant economics spectrum. Traits from root, stem and leaf showed coordinated effects on seeding mortality, in which species with conservative traits tended to have lower mortality rates than species with acquisitive traits. Root traits, such as root nitrogen content, tissue density and specific root length significantly related to seedling mortality. We concluded that traits from different organs were coordinated describing an acquisitive-conservative continuum of strategies and have consistent effects on seedling mortality, providing the first evidence for the plant economics spectrum and for the root trait-mortality relationships in subtropical seedling communities. Our results emphasized that besides aboveground traits, key root traits significantly impact seedling mortality. Integrating root traits is necessary to gain further understanding in the relationships between plant performance and traits.
引用
收藏
页码:285 / 292
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Conspecific Leaf Litter-Mediated Effect of Conspecific Adult Neighborhood on Early-Stage Seedling Survival in A Subtropical Forest
    Heming Liu
    Guochun Shen
    Zunping Ma
    Qingsong Yang
    Jianyang Xia
    Xiaofeng Fang
    Xihua Wang
    Scientific Reports, 6
  • [42] Robust hyperspectral estimation of eight leaf functional traits across different species and canopy layers in a subtropical evergreen broad-leaf forest
    Yu, Fangyuan
    Wu, Yongru
    Wang, Junjie
    Lian, Juyu
    Wu, Zhuo
    Ye, Wanhui
    Wu, Zhifeng
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2024, 169
  • [43] Shifts in community leaf functional traits are related to litter decomposition along a secondary forest succession series in subtropical China
    Eichenberg, David
    Trogisch, Stefan
    Huang, Yuanyuan
    He, Jin-Sheng
    Bruelheide, Helge
    JOURNAL OF PLANT ECOLOGY, 2015, 8 (04) : 401 - 410
  • [44] Strategic differentiation of subcommunities composed of evergreen and deciduous woody species associated with leaf functional traits in the subtropical mixed forest
    Wang, Li
    He, Yuejun
    Umer, Muhammad
    Guo, Yun
    Tan, Qiyu
    Kang, Liling
    Fang, Zhengyuan
    Shen, Kaiping
    Xia, Tingting
    Wu, Pan
    Liu, Yuan
    Zang, Lipeng
    Liu, Qingfu
    Zhao, Yan
    Chen, Hongchun
    Zhao, Ying
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2023, 150
  • [45] Species-Specific Effects on Throughfall Kinetic Energy in Subtropical Forest Plantations Are Related to Leaf Traits and Tree Architecture
    Goebes, Philipp
    Bruelheide, Helge
    Haerdtle, Werner
    Kroeber, Wenzel
    Kuehn, Peter
    Li, Ying
    Seitz, Steffen
    von Oheimb, Goddert
    Scholten, Thomas
    PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (06):
  • [46] Drier, more seasonal climates strengthen coordination of hydraulic, leaf economic and reproductive strategies in subtropical forest tree communities
    Radford-Smith, Julian
    Dwyer, John M.
    ECOGRAPHY, 2025,
  • [47] Coordination between leaf and stem traits related to leaf carbon gain and hydraulics across 32 drought-tolerant angiosperms
    Ishida, Atsushi
    Nakano, Takashi
    Yazaki, Kenichi
    Matsuki, Sawako
    Koike, Nobuya
    Lauenstein, Diego L.
    Shimizu, Michiru
    Yamashita, Naoko
    OECOLOGIA, 2008, 156 (01) : 193 - 202
  • [48] Coordination between leaf and stem traits related to leaf carbon gain and hydraulics across 32 drought-tolerant angiosperms
    Atsushi Ishida
    Takashi Nakano
    Kenichi Yazaki
    Sawako Matsuki
    Nobuya Koike
    Diego L. Lauenstein
    Michiru Shimizu
    Naoko Yamashita
    Oecologia, 2008, 156
  • [49] Tree Species Traits but Not Diversity Mitigate Stem Breakage in a Subtropical Forest following a Rare and Extreme Ice Storm
    Nadrowski, Karin
    Pietsch, Katherina
    Baruffol, Martin
    Both, Sabine
    Gutknecht, Jessica
    Bruelheide, Helge
    Heklau, Heike
    Kahl, Anja
    Kahl, Tiemo
    Niklaus, Pascal
    Kroeber, Wenzel
    Liu, Xiaojuan
    Mi, Xiangcheng
    Michalski, Stefan
    von Oheimb, Goddert
    Purschke, Oliver
    Schmid, Bernhard
    Fang, Teng
    Welk, Erik
    Wirth, Christian
    PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (05):
  • [50] Looking at the forest from below: the role of seedling root traits in the adaptation to climate change of two Nothofagus species in Argentina
    Virginia G. Duboscq-Carra
    Federico J. Letourneau
    Mario J. Pastorino
    New Forests, 2018, 49 : 613 - 635