Across a macro-ecological gradient forest competition is strongest at the most productive sites

We tested the hypothesis that the effect of forest basal area on tree growth interacts with macro-ecological gradients of primary productivity, using a large dataset of eucalypt tree growth collected across temperate and sub- tropical mesic Australia. To do this, we derived an index of inter-tree co...

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Main Authors: Lynda Dorothy Prior, David eBowman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2014.00260/full
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spelling doaj-85b4c9a963b64ac5b819c45c775af67f2020-11-24T22:58:44ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2014-06-01510.3389/fpls.2014.0026091535Across a macro-ecological gradient forest competition is strongest at the most productive sitesLynda Dorothy Prior0David eBowman1University of TasmaniaUniversity of TasmaniaWe tested the hypothesis that the effect of forest basal area on tree growth interacts with macro-ecological gradients of primary productivity, using a large dataset of eucalypt tree growth collected across temperate and sub- tropical mesic Australia. To do this, we derived an index of inter-tree competition based on stand basal area relative to the climatically determined potential basal area. Using linear mixed effects modeling, we found that the main effects of climatic productivity, tree size and competition explained 26.5% of the deviance in individual tree growth, but adding interactions to the model could explain a further 8.9%. The effect of competition on growth interacts with the gradient of climatic productivity, with negligible effect of competition in low productivity environments, but marked negative effects at the most productive sites. We also found a positive interaction between tree size and stand basal area, which was most pronounced in the most productive sites. We interpret these patterns as reflecting intense competition for light amongst maturing trees on more productive sites, and below ground moisture limitation at low productivity sites, which results in open stands with little competition for light. These trends are consistent with the life history and stand development of eucalypt forests: in cool moist environments, light is the most limiting resource, resulting in size-asymmetric competition, while in hot, low rainfall environments are open forests with little competition for light but where the amount of tree regeneration is limited by water availability.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2014.00260/fullEucalyptuscompetitionclimatediameter incrementtree sizebasal area
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lynda Dorothy Prior
David eBowman
spellingShingle Lynda Dorothy Prior
David eBowman
Across a macro-ecological gradient forest competition is strongest at the most productive sites
Frontiers in Plant Science
Eucalyptus
competition
climate
diameter increment
tree size
basal area
author_facet Lynda Dorothy Prior
David eBowman
author_sort Lynda Dorothy Prior
title Across a macro-ecological gradient forest competition is strongest at the most productive sites
title_short Across a macro-ecological gradient forest competition is strongest at the most productive sites
title_full Across a macro-ecological gradient forest competition is strongest at the most productive sites
title_fullStr Across a macro-ecological gradient forest competition is strongest at the most productive sites
title_full_unstemmed Across a macro-ecological gradient forest competition is strongest at the most productive sites
title_sort across a macro-ecological gradient forest competition is strongest at the most productive sites
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Plant Science
issn 1664-462X
publishDate 2014-06-01
description We tested the hypothesis that the effect of forest basal area on tree growth interacts with macro-ecological gradients of primary productivity, using a large dataset of eucalypt tree growth collected across temperate and sub- tropical mesic Australia. To do this, we derived an index of inter-tree competition based on stand basal area relative to the climatically determined potential basal area. Using linear mixed effects modeling, we found that the main effects of climatic productivity, tree size and competition explained 26.5% of the deviance in individual tree growth, but adding interactions to the model could explain a further 8.9%. The effect of competition on growth interacts with the gradient of climatic productivity, with negligible effect of competition in low productivity environments, but marked negative effects at the most productive sites. We also found a positive interaction between tree size and stand basal area, which was most pronounced in the most productive sites. We interpret these patterns as reflecting intense competition for light amongst maturing trees on more productive sites, and below ground moisture limitation at low productivity sites, which results in open stands with little competition for light. These trends are consistent with the life history and stand development of eucalypt forests: in cool moist environments, light is the most limiting resource, resulting in size-asymmetric competition, while in hot, low rainfall environments are open forests with little competition for light but where the amount of tree regeneration is limited by water availability.
topic Eucalyptus
competition
climate
diameter increment
tree size
basal area
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2014.00260/full
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