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Consistency of demographic trade-offs across 13 (sub)tropical forests

Authors :
Stephan Kambach
Richard Condit
Salomón Aguilar
Helge Bruelheide
Sarayudh Bunyavejchewin
Chia‐Hao Chang‐Yang
Yu‐Yun Chen
George Chuyong
Stuart J. Davies
Sisira Ediriweera
Corneille E. N. Ewango
Edwino S. Fernando
Nimal Gunatilleke
Savitri Gunatilleke
Stephen P. Hubbell
Akira Itoh
David Kenfack
Somboon Kiratiprayoon
Yi‐Ching Lin
Jean‐Remy Makana
Mohizah Bt. Mohamad
Nantachai Pongpattananurak
Rolando Pérez
Lillian Jennifer V. Rodriguez
I‐Fang Sun
Sylvester Tan
Duncan Thomas
Jill Thompson
Maria Uriarte
Renato Valencia
Christian Wirth
S. Joseph Wright
Shu‐Hui Wu
Takuo Yamakura
Tze Leong Yao
Jess Zimmerman
Nadja Rüger
Source :
Ecology
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

1. Organisms of all species must balance their allocation to growth, survival and recruitment. Among tree species, evolution has resulted in different life-history strategies for partitioning resources to these key demographic processes. Life-history strategies in tropical forests have often been shown to align along a trade-off between fast growth and high survival, that is, the well-known fast–slow continuum. In addition, an orthogonal trade-off has been proposed between tall stature—resulting from fast growth and high survival—and recruitment success, that is, a stature−recruitment trade-off. However, it is not clear whether these two independent dimensions of life-history variation structure tropical forests worldwide. 2. We used data from 13 large-scale and long-term tropical forest monitoring plots in three continents to explore the principal trade-offs in annual growth, survival and recruitment as well as tree stature. These forests included relatively undisturbed forests as well as typhoon-disturbed forests. Life-history variation in 12 forests was structured by two orthogonal trade-offs, the growth−survival trade-off and the stature−recruitment trade-off. Pairwise Procrustes analysis revealed a high similarity of demographic relationships among forests. The small deviations were related to differences between African and Asian plots. 3. Synthesis. The fast–slow continuum and tree stature are two independent dimensions structuring many, but not all tropical tree communities. Our discovery of the consistency of demographic trade-offs and life-history strategies across different forest types from three continents substantially improves our ability to predict tropical forest dynamics worldwide.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....327de560c4e6ee1b2da3e298f573bcd6