plant economics spectrum in Mediterranean forests along environmental gradients: is there coordination among leaf, stem and root traits?
QUESTIONS: Is there any evidence of coordination among leaf, stem and root traits, and thereby of the existence of a plant economics spectrum at the species and community level in Mediterranean forests? Are these traits related to plant size and seed mass? LOCATION: Mediterranean forests and shrubla...
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Published in | Journal of vegetation science Vol. 27; no. 1; pp. 187 - 199 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Opulus Press
01.01.2016
Blackwell Publishing Ltd |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | QUESTIONS: Is there any evidence of coordination among leaf, stem and root traits, and thereby of the existence of a plant economics spectrum at the species and community level in Mediterranean forests? Are these traits related to plant size and seed mass? LOCATION: Mediterranean forests and shrublands, Sierra Morena mountains, Córdoba, southern Spain. METHODS: We selected nine woody plant communities along a natural local gradient of soil water and nutrient availability. We measured key leaf, stem, root and whole‐plant traits for 38 dominant woody plant species. The variation across species of 15 functional traits (of the leaf, stem and root) was analysed and coordination among them was tested. We explored the relationships between these traits (hereafter ‘resource‐use traits’ due to their close association with the acquisition–conservation trade‐off) and plant height and seed mass. Finally, we compared results at species level with those calculated at community level, considering community‐weighted means (CWMs). RESULTS: We found a significant coordination between traits belonging to different plant organs, and propose the existence of a plant economics spectrum in Mediterranean forests along the environmental gradient. However, weaker relationships were found within groups of species under similar environmental conditions. We did not find the expected orthogonal relationships between plant height, seed mass and resource‐use traits. Relationships among functional traits were stronger at the community level than at the species level. CONCLUSIONS: This study reveals a high degree of functional coordination between traits belonging to different plant organs at both species and community level, and suggests the existence of a plant economics spectrum across 38 Mediterranean woody plant species. However, this general trend of functional coordination between organs became weaker or disappeared when considering restricted groups of species belonging to environmentally similar sites (e.g. dry vs wet sites), suggesting that the diversification of strategies within communities is not related to the economics spectrum at a lower spatial scale. Interestingly, the high degree of coordination between resource‐use traits and seed mass at the community level seems to support the tolerance–fecundity model, which predicts an inverse relationship between fecundity and stress tolerance. |
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Bibliography: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jvs.12341 istex:F4DB8DEC0E5F444E6D95A03137942F0AA3F22321 Andalusian ANASINQUE project - No. PGC2010-RNM-5782 ark:/67375/WNG-1ZBN57HX-1 European FEDER funds Appendix S1. Species list. Appendix S2. Functional traits list. Appendix S3. Phylogenetic tree. Appendix S4. Pearson correlation coefficients between traits. Appendix S5. Relationships between morphological traits, carbon isotope fraction and leaf chlorophyll. Appendix S6. Phylogenetic generalized least square analysis. Appendix S7. Non-metric multidimensional scaling analysis. Appendix S8. Illustration of the scale effects. ECO-MEDIT - No. CGL2014-53236-R Life + Biodehesa Project - No. 11/BIO/ES/000726 Spanish MEC coordinated project DIVERBOS - No. CGL2011-30285-C02-01; No. C02-02 ArticleID:JVS12341 ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 1100-9233 1654-1103 |
DOI: | 10.1111/jvs.12341 |