Authors
S Joseph Wright, Kaoru Kitajima, Nathan JB Kraft, Peter B Reich, Ian J Wright, Daniel E Bunker, Richard Condit, James W Dalling, Stuart J Davies, Sandra Díaz, Bettina MJ Engelbrecht, Kyle E Harms, Stephen P Hubbell, Christian O Marks, Maria C Ruiz-Jaen, Cristina M Salvador, Amy E Zanne
Publication date
2010/12
Journal
Ecology
Volume
91
Issue
12
Pages
3664-3674
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Description
A trade‐off between growth and mortality rates characterizes tree species in closed canopy forests. This trade‐off is maintained by inherent differences among species and spatial variation in light availability caused by canopy‐opening disturbances. We evaluated conditions under which the trade‐off is expressed and relationships with four key functional traits for 103 tree species from Barro Colorado Island, Panama. The trade‐off is strongest for saplings for growth rates of the fastest growing individuals and mortality rates of the slowest growing individuals (r2 = 0.69), intermediate for saplings for average growth rates and overall mortality rates (r2 = 0.46), and much weaker for large trees (r2 ≤ 0.10). This parallels likely levels of spatial variation in light availability, which is greatest for fast‐ vs. slow‐growing saplings and least for large trees with foliage in the forest canopy. Inherent attributes of species contributing to …
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