Early subtropical forest growth is driven by community mean trait values and functional diversity rather than the abiotic environment

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Authors

  • Wenzel Kröber
  • Ying Li
  • Werner Härdtle
  • Keping Ma
  • Bernhard Schmid
  • Karsten Schmidt
  • Thomas Scholten
  • Gunnar Seidler
  • Goddert von Oheimb
  • Erik Welk
  • Christian Wirth
  • Helge Bruehlheide

While functional diversity (FD) has been shown to be positively related to a number of ecosystem functions including biomass production, it may have a much less pronounced effect than that of environmental factors or species-specific properties. Leaf and wood traits can be considered particularly relevant to tree growth, as they reflect a trade-off between resources invested into growth and persistence. Our study focussed on the degree to which early forest growth was driven by FD, the environment (11 variables characterizing abiotic habitat conditions), and community-weighted mean (CWM) values of species traits in the context of a large-scale tree diversity experiment (BEF-China). Growth rates of trees with respect to crown diameter were aggregated across 231 plots (hosting between one and 23 tree species) and related to environmental variables, FD, and CWM, the latter two of which were based on 41 plant functional traits. The effects of each of the three predictor groups were analyzed separately by mixed model optimization and jointly by variance partitioning. Numerous single traits predicted plot-level tree growth, both in the models based on CWMs and FD, but none of the environmental variables was able to predict tree growth. In the best models, environment and FD explained only 4 and 31% of variation in crown growth rates, respectively, while CWM trait values explained 42%. In total, the best models accounted for 51% of crown growth. The marginal role of the selected environmental variables was unexpected, given the high topographic heterogeneity and large size of the experiment, as was the significant impact of FD, demonstrating that positive diversity effects already occur during the early stages in tree plantations. The manuscript addresses an approach to the framework suggested by Díaz et al. (2007, PNAS) to disentangle the effect of environment, species identity and functional diversity in tree communities. We present a dataset with 231 plots varying in ecological characteristics, species and functional diversity. We used a set of 41 plant functional traits for 23 tree species. Our most striking result is that the ecological environment only explained 4% of plot mean values in crown increment, whereas community weighted mean values and functional diversities of trait combinations explained 42 and 31%, respectively, adding up to 51% explained variation in combination. We can conclude that functional diversity even 3 years after planting has a significant impact on productivity.

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ZeitschriftEcology and Evolution
Jahrgang5
Ausgabenummer17
Seiten (von - bis)3541-3556
Anzahl der Seiten16
ISSN2045-7758
DOIs
PublikationsstatusErschienen - 01.09.2015

Bibliographische Notiz

Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

    Fachgebiete

  • Ökosystemforschung - BEF-China, Community-weighted mean traits, ecosystem functioning, plant functional traits, stomatal density, trees

Zugehörige Projekte

  • Individual plant growth and branch demography as a function of species richness and composition (FOR 891 - Teilprojekt 02)

    Projekt: Forschung

Dokumente

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. Tree and mycorrhizal fungal diversity drive intraspecific and intraindividual trait variation in temperate forests
  2. Interactive sequential generative models for team sports
  3. Evidence for singlet state β cleavage in the photoreaction of α-(2,6-dimethoxyphenoxy)-acetophenone inferred from time-resolved CIDNP spectroscopy
  4. Biodiversity in space and time - towards a grid mapping for Mongolia
  5. Education and Communication as Prerequisites for and Components of Sustainable Development. Reflections for Policies, Conceptual Work, and Theory, Based on Previous Practises
  6. Why Fun Matters: In Search of Emergent Playful Experiences
  7. Deconstructing and reconstructing diversity in client-provider-relationships of social work
  8. Using frequency tagging to investigate social processing in autism
  9. Horizontal, but not vertical canopy structure is related to stand functional diversity in a subtropical slope forest
  10. Influences of RVE topology, discretization and boundary conditions in practical multiscaling - a comparison
  11. (Un)Bestimmtheit
  12. Repatriation, Public Programming, and the DEAI Toolkit
  13. Integrating inductive and deductive analysis to identify and characterize archetypical social-ecological systems and their changes
  14. Gamen
  15. Framework for empirical research on science teaching and learning
  16. Germination changes can restructure communities through priority effects
  17. Development and Validation of a Us and German Short Version of the Later Life Workplace Index (llwi- S)
  18. Latent trees for coreference resolution
  19. Fulfillment of Heterogeneous Customer Delivery Times through Decoupling the Production and Accelerating Production Orders
  20. Monitoring fast-moving animals—Building a customized camera system and evaluation toolset
  21. Experimental Tests for an Innovative Catamaran Prototype
  22. Counteracting electric vehicle range concern with a scalable behavioural intervention
  23. Living Labs for Product Circularity: Learnings from the ‘Innovation Network aiming at Sustainable Smartphones’