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Seedlings
Baraloto (2001) characterized seeds and seedlings of many species in French Guiana.
Data
Data by species.
Summary
Differences in distribution among plant species across environmental gradients
are often assumed to be due to tradeoffs in organismal traits, individual performance,
or both. In this thesis, I investigated how tradeoffs among neotropical tree
species might lead to differences in their distribution in contrasting environments,
linking the three levels at which tradeoffs migh occur: organismal traits, individual
performance and population structure.
I first conducted a survey of traits for seeds and seedlings of 202 tree species
at Paracou, French Guiana, and found that taxa with larger seeds generally had
seedlings with hypogeal cotyledons and taproots. While larger-seeded taxa were
associated with larger seedlings, they also had lower maximum relative growth
rates and lower specific leaf area. I then studied differences among a total
of 31 species differing in seed size and seedling morphology, examining performance
response to multiple environmental variables at fines spatial scales. At the
seed-seedling stage, no tradeoffs occured for survival or growth across a wide
range of conditions; larger seeds performed better in all environments. In contrast,
species-environment interactions for the relative growth rates of older seedlings
resulted in a shift in the performance hierarchy between soil types and light
environments. However, this tradeoff did not reflect the tradeoffs in traits
observed among seedlings. Established seedlings more than one year in age did
not exhibit tradeoffs in growth. Moreover, traits related to initial performance,
such as seed size, were not associated with growth rates over a two-year period.
The lack of tradeoffs I found for individual performance was consistent with
the few differences in distribution of juveniles that I observed in a 1.5 hectare
permanent plot census. For all 15 species studied, juveniles coexisted across
environmental gradients without partitioning microhabitats.
These results suggest that competitive hierarchies during regeneration are
not strong forces influencing seedling community structure in neotropical forests.
The early structuring of these communities may be largery determined by life
history tradeoffs related to seed size, independent of environment. In contrast,
subsequent growth of juveniles appear to be uncoupled from initial survival
because species-environment interactions occur that are governed by morphological
tradeoffs unrelated to seed size.
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Last update on
2/28/2011
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