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DOI10.1016/j.foreco.2020.117894
Tree growth, recruitment, and survival in a tropical dry woodland: The importance of soil and functional identity of the neighbourhood
Muledi J.; Bauman D.; Jacobs A.; Meerts P.; Shutcha M.; Drouet T.
发表日期2020
ISSN0378-1127
卷号460
英文摘要Understanding the processes that foster species coexistence is a longstanding goal in community ecology. Trade-offs in species performances for different ecological functions have been proposed as a general mechanism of species assemblage. The nature of these trade-offs can be revealed by analysing the demographic characteristics of species combined with their functional traits (FT) and the surrounding environment. The respective roles of soil, stand structure, and the functional dissimilarity of the neighbourhood, to the variations of growth, recruitment, and survival were determined for 19 most frequent tree species examined at the individual level in a tropical dry woodland (miombo; Democratic Republic of the Congo). Four functional groups can be recognised by contrasting life-history strategies and mainly related to tree stature, leaf phenology, leaf area (LA), leaf nutrient content, ectomycorrhizal status, and dispersal mode. Growth is regulated by the functional dissimilarity of the neighbourhood, local stand structure, and soil conditions. Recruitment is comparatively less impacted by functional neighbourhood but is mainly influenced by stand basal area and mean DBH as well as available calcium. At the community level, survival is mainly explained by physical and chemical soil variables and by both negative and positive effects of traits dissimilarity with the neighbourhood. Functional dissimilarity of the neighbourhood has the greatest positive effect on growth and survival, whereas competitive hierarchy is detrimental for growth of Caesalpinioideae species in particular, and for survival to a lesser extent. The general involvement of foliar traits and stand basal area on demographic performances indicates that competition for light is a key axis of species niche differentiation along the fast-slow continuum, even in this tropical dry woodland. Our results also pointed out a trade-off between water resources and phosphorus availability or aluminium avoidance, which separates growth strategies and leads to habitat specialisation. Multiple trade-offs allow species coexistence, with distinct drivers for tree growth, recruitment, and survival. Combining demographic and trait-based approaches provides unique key insights to understand species coexistence mechanisms. © 2020 Elsevier B.V.
英文关键词Africa; Competition; Complementarity; Demographic rates; Forest; Functional traits; Miombo woodland; Neighbourhood effect; Soil; Vital rates
语种英语
scopus关键词Competition; Economic and social effects; Forestry; Population statistics; Soils; Tropics; Water resources; Africa; Complementarity; Forest; Functional traits; Miombo woodlands; Neighbourhood; Ecology; basal area; coexistence; competition (ecology); functional role; growth response; life history; neighborhood; recruitment (population dynamics); survival; tree; tropical forest; woodland; Africa; Competition; Forestry; Tropics; Water Resources; Congo; Caesalpinioideae
来源期刊Forest Ecology and Management
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/155471
作者单位Ecologie, Restauration Ecologique et Paysage, Faculté des Sciences Agronomiques, Université de Lubumbashi, Route Kasapa BP 1825, Democratic Republic Congo; Laboratoire d’Écologie Végétale et Biogéochimie (EvB), CP244, Faculté des Sciences, Université Libre de Bruxelles, 50 av. F.D. Roosevelt, Brussels, 1050, Belgium; Environmental Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX1 3QY, United Kingdom
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Muledi J.,Bauman D.,Jacobs A.,et al. Tree growth, recruitment, and survival in a tropical dry woodland: The importance of soil and functional identity of the neighbourhood[J],2020,460.
APA Muledi J.,Bauman D.,Jacobs A.,Meerts P.,Shutcha M.,&Drouet T..(2020).Tree growth, recruitment, and survival in a tropical dry woodland: The importance of soil and functional identity of the neighbourhood.Forest Ecology and Management,460.
MLA Muledi J.,et al."Tree growth, recruitment, and survival in a tropical dry woodland: The importance of soil and functional identity of the neighbourhood".Forest Ecology and Management 460(2020).
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