Interspecific variation in mortality and growth and changes in their relationship with size class in an old‐growth temperate forest

Abstract Understanding trade‐offs between demographic parameters is crucial when investigating community assembly rules in high‐diversity forests. To this end, we estimated mortality and growth parameters, and correlations among them, across entire size classes for 17 tree species (Betula, Carpinus,...

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Main Authors: Takashi Masaki, Ryo Kitagawa, Tohru Nakashizuka, Mitsue Shibata, Hiroshi Tanaka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-07-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7720
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spelling doaj-b4febb80bb3c4171b3d03ad6a0692ec22021-09-22T11:50:37ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582021-07-0111138869888110.1002/ece3.7720Interspecific variation in mortality and growth and changes in their relationship with size class in an old‐growth temperate forestTakashi Masaki0Ryo Kitagawa1Tohru Nakashizuka2Mitsue Shibata3Hiroshi Tanaka4Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute Tsukuba JapanKansai Research Center Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute Kyoto JapanForestry and Forest Products Research Institute Tsukuba JapanForestry and Forest Products Research Institute Tsukuba JapanJapan Forest Technology Association Tokyo JapanAbstract Understanding trade‐offs between demographic parameters is crucial when investigating community assembly rules in high‐diversity forests. To this end, we estimated mortality and growth parameters, and correlations among them, across entire size classes for 17 tree species (Betula, Carpinus, Fagus, Quercus, Castanea, Acer, Cerasus, Swida, Kalopanax, and Styrax) using a dataset over 18 years obtained from an old‐growth forest in Japan. Size classes were represented by 12 categories determined by age, height, and diameter at breast height (DBH) from new seedlings to stems of DBH >85 cm. We derived the annual mortality and growth for each species and class using estimates of transition probabilities between classes. Trade‐offs or synergies in growth and survival among species per size class were analyzed with and without the inclusion of phylogenetic relationships. Annual mortality showed U‐shaped patterns across size classes for species that could potentially reach a DBH ≥55 cm: 0.2–0.98 for seedlings, 0.002–0.01 at DBH 35–45 cm, and ca. 0.01 at DBH ≥55 cm. Other species demonstrated monotonically decreasing mortality toward specific maximum size classes. When phylogenetic information was included in analyses, the correlations between survival and growth changed across size classes were significant for some classes: As an overall tendency, synergy was observed in growth and survival for seedling to sapling classes, trade‐offs for juvenile to DBH 15–25 cm classes, and synergy again for larger classes. When phylogenetic information was not included, a significant trade‐off was observed only at DBH 5–15 cm. Synthesis. Trade‐offs at intermediate classes imply differentiation in demographic characteristics related to life history strategies. However, evolutionarily obtained demographic characteristics are not substantial drivers of niche differentiation in the study area. The polylemma of mortality, growth, and other parameters such as the onset of reproduction may also be important factors driving species‐specific demographic traits.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7720demographic synergydemographic trade‐offhierarchical modelingOgawa Forest Reservephylogenetically independent contraststransition probability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Takashi Masaki
Ryo Kitagawa
Tohru Nakashizuka
Mitsue Shibata
Hiroshi Tanaka
spellingShingle Takashi Masaki
Ryo Kitagawa
Tohru Nakashizuka
Mitsue Shibata
Hiroshi Tanaka
Interspecific variation in mortality and growth and changes in their relationship with size class in an old‐growth temperate forest
Ecology and Evolution
demographic synergy
demographic trade‐off
hierarchical modeling
Ogawa Forest Reserve
phylogenetically independent contrasts
transition probability
author_facet Takashi Masaki
Ryo Kitagawa
Tohru Nakashizuka
Mitsue Shibata
Hiroshi Tanaka
author_sort Takashi Masaki
title Interspecific variation in mortality and growth and changes in their relationship with size class in an old‐growth temperate forest
title_short Interspecific variation in mortality and growth and changes in their relationship with size class in an old‐growth temperate forest
title_full Interspecific variation in mortality and growth and changes in their relationship with size class in an old‐growth temperate forest
title_fullStr Interspecific variation in mortality and growth and changes in their relationship with size class in an old‐growth temperate forest
title_full_unstemmed Interspecific variation in mortality and growth and changes in their relationship with size class in an old‐growth temperate forest
title_sort interspecific variation in mortality and growth and changes in their relationship with size class in an old‐growth temperate forest
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Understanding trade‐offs between demographic parameters is crucial when investigating community assembly rules in high‐diversity forests. To this end, we estimated mortality and growth parameters, and correlations among them, across entire size classes for 17 tree species (Betula, Carpinus, Fagus, Quercus, Castanea, Acer, Cerasus, Swida, Kalopanax, and Styrax) using a dataset over 18 years obtained from an old‐growth forest in Japan. Size classes were represented by 12 categories determined by age, height, and diameter at breast height (DBH) from new seedlings to stems of DBH >85 cm. We derived the annual mortality and growth for each species and class using estimates of transition probabilities between classes. Trade‐offs or synergies in growth and survival among species per size class were analyzed with and without the inclusion of phylogenetic relationships. Annual mortality showed U‐shaped patterns across size classes for species that could potentially reach a DBH ≥55 cm: 0.2–0.98 for seedlings, 0.002–0.01 at DBH 35–45 cm, and ca. 0.01 at DBH ≥55 cm. Other species demonstrated monotonically decreasing mortality toward specific maximum size classes. When phylogenetic information was included in analyses, the correlations between survival and growth changed across size classes were significant for some classes: As an overall tendency, synergy was observed in growth and survival for seedling to sapling classes, trade‐offs for juvenile to DBH 15–25 cm classes, and synergy again for larger classes. When phylogenetic information was not included, a significant trade‐off was observed only at DBH 5–15 cm. Synthesis. Trade‐offs at intermediate classes imply differentiation in demographic characteristics related to life history strategies. However, evolutionarily obtained demographic characteristics are not substantial drivers of niche differentiation in the study area. The polylemma of mortality, growth, and other parameters such as the onset of reproduction may also be important factors driving species‐specific demographic traits.
topic demographic synergy
demographic trade‐off
hierarchical modeling
Ogawa Forest Reserve
phylogenetically independent contrasts
transition probability
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7720
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