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Demographic variation and habitat specialization of tree species in a diverse tropical forest of Cameroon

Authors :
David Kenfack
George B Chuyong
Richard Condit
Sabrina E Russo
Duncan W Thomas
Source :
Forest Ecosystems, Vol 1 (2014)
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
KeAi Communications Co., Ltd., 2014.

Abstract

Background Many tree species in tropical forests have distributions tracking local ridge-slope-valley topography. Previous work in a 50-ha plot in Korup National Park, Cameroon, demonstrated that 272 species, or 63% of those tested, were significantly associated with topography. Methods We used two censuses of 329,000 trees ≥1 cm dbh to examine demographic variation at this site that would account for those observed habitat preferences. We tested two predictions. First, within a given topographic habitat, species specializing on that habitat (‘residents’) should outperform species that are specialists of other habitats (‘foreigners’). Second, across different topographic habitats, species should perform best in the habitat on which they specialize (‘home’) compared to other habitats (‘away’). Species’ performance was estimated using growth and mortality rates. Results In hierarchical models with species identity as a random effect, we found no evidence of a demographic advantage to resident species. Indeed, growth rates were most often higher for foreign species. Similarly, comparisons of species on their home vs. away habitats revealed no sign of a performance advantage on the home habitat. Conclusions We reject the hypothesis that species distributions along a ridge-valley catena at Korup are caused by species differences in trees ≥1 cm dbh. Since there must be a demographic cause for habitat specialization, we offer three alternatives. First, the demographic advantage specialists have at home occurs at the reproductive or seedling stage, in sizes smaller than we census in the forest plot. Second, species may have higher performance on their preferred habitat when density is low, but when population builds up, there are negative density-dependent feedbacks that reduce performance. Third, demographic filtering may be produced by extreme environmental conditions that we did not observe during the census interval.

Subjects

Subjects :
Ecology
QH540-549.5

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20956355 and 21975620
Volume :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Forest Ecosystems
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.70ce57d17a4a497a830c44831ee887ac
Document Type :
article