AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates how saplings in a rainforest community trade off between height gain and main-stem costs, examining 75 woody plant species in subtropical eastern Australia.
  • The researchers found that the height-diameter scaling relationship for these saplings is consistent with previous findings, indicating different species require varying amounts of main-stem volume to reach a height of 5 m, which is not strongly correlated with other traits like mature height or leaf size.
  • The results suggest that faster growth in height may come with higher mortality rates, highlighting the importance of stem diameter and wood density in balancing immediate strength against long-term sustainability.

Article Abstract

Background And Aims: Height gain plays an important role in plant life-history strategies and species coexistence. Here main-stem costs of height gain of saplings across species within a rainforest community are compared.

Methods: Scaling relationships of height to diameter at the sapling stage were compared among 75 woody rainforest plant species in subtropical eastern Australia using standardized major axis regression. Main-stem costs of height gain were then related to other functional traits that reflect aspects of species ecological strategies.

Key Results: Slopes (beta) for the height-diameter (H-D) scaling relationship were close to 1.3, in line with previous reports and with theory. Main-stem volume to achieve 5 m in height varied substantially between species, including between species within groups based on adult height and successional status. The variation was largely independent of other species traits, being uncorrelated with mature plant height (H(max)) and with leaf size, and weakly negatively correlated with wood density and seed size. The relationship between volume to reach 5 m and wood density was too weak to be regarded as a trade-off. Estimated main-stem dry mass to achieve 5 m height varied almost three-fold across species, with wood density and stem volume contributing roughly equally to the variation.

Conclusion: The wide range in economy of sapling height gain reported here is presumed to be associated with a trade-off between faster growth and higher mortality rates. It is suggested that wide diameters would have a stronger effect in preventing main-stem breakage in the short term, while high wood density would have a stronger effect in sustaining stem strength over time.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2749529PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aob/mcp185DOI Listing

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