Nutrient‐based species selection is a prevalent driver of community assembly and functional trait space in tropical forests

Author:

Peguero Guille123ORCID,Coello Fernando23,Sardans Jordi23,Asensio Dolores23,Grau Oriol234,Llusià Joan23,Ogaya Romà23,Urbina Ifigenia23ORCID,Van Langenhove Leandro4,Verryckt Lore T.4ORCID,Stahl Clément5,Bréchet Laëtitia45ORCID,Courtois Elodie A.6,Chave Jérôme7ORCID,Hérault Bruno8910ORCID,Janssens Ivan A.4,Peñuelas Josep23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Evolutionary Biology, Ecology and Environmental Sciences Universitat de Barcelona Barcelona Spain

2. Global Ecology Unit CSIC‐CREAF‐UAB Bellaterra Spain

3. CREAF Cerdanyola del Vallès Spain

4. Centre of Excellence Global Change Ecology, Department of Biology University of Antwerp Wilrijk Belgium

5. UMR EcoFoG, AgroParisTech, CIRAD, CNRS, INRAE Université des Antilles, Université de Guyane Kourou France

6. Laboratoire Ecologie, Évolution, Interactions des Systèmes Amazoniens (LEEISA) Université de Guyane, CNRS, IFREMER Cayenne France

7. Laboratoire Evolution et Diversité Biologique (UMR5174) Université de Toulouse, CNRS, IRD, UPS Toulouse France

8. CIRAD UPR Forêts et Sociétés Yamoussoukro Côte d'Ivoire

9. Forêts et Sociétés Univ Montpellier, CIRAD Montpellier France

10. Institut National Polytechnique Félix Houphouët‐Boigny INP‐HB Yamoussoukro Côte d'Ivoire

Abstract

Abstract Soil nutrient availability and functional traits interact in complex ways during the assembly of tree communities hindering our understanding of the implications that this may have for their phylogenetic and functional diversity. We combined abundance, taxonomic, phylogenetic and functional trait data of 222 tree species distributed along nutrient concentration gradients at 24 plots in two tropical forest study sites. We analysed micro and macronutrient concentration in organic and topsoil horizons and tested for the following: (1) nutrient‐based species sorting due to contrasting trait–environment relationships, (2) whether nutrient filtering has consequences for phylogenetic and functional diversity, and functional space size and occupancy and (3) we mapped trait distributions across the phylogeny of tree species to track the evolutionary signature of nutrient availability. We found that total nitrogen (N), available phosphorus and total potassium in soil accounted for 68% of the variation in tropical tree species community composition, with strong associations with nutrient concentration for 89% of the tree species included in the analysis. This nutrient‐based species selection was mediated by interactions between the three soil nutrient concentrations with leaf nitrogen, leaf thickness and wood density. Soil N concentration was positively associated with the functional space at site level. At plot level, soil N concentration positively correlated with functional evenness and it was negatively associated with the functional space not occupied by any species in the tree community. Despite the phylogenetic conservatism of leaf N across tree lineages even when not considering legumes, many sister‐species pairs show contrasting values which match with their habitat preferences thus indicating the evolutionary lability of this trait, particularly within recently diversified clades. Synthesis. Our results demonstrate that soil nutrient‐based species selection is a prevalent driver of community assembly in tropical forests, a process mediated by key functional traits within the leaf and wood economics spectrum. Functional space size and its filling increase with soil nutrient concentration, whereas niche vacancy decreases. This selection process has likely influenced tropical tree species diversification patterns via habitat specialization.

Funder

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Agencia Estatal de Investigación

Departament d'Universitats, Recerca i Societat de la Informació

FP7 Ideas: European Research Council

Fundación Ramón Areces

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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