Environmental conditions differently shape leaf, seed and seedling trait composition between and within elevations of tropical montane forests

Author:

Barczyk Maciej K.123ORCID,Acosta‐Rojas Diana Carolina12ORCID,Iván Espinosa Carlos4ORCID,Homeier Jürgen56ORCID,Tinoco Boris A.7ORCID,Velescu Andre8,Wilcke Wolfgang8ORCID,Schleuning Matthias1ORCID,Neuschulz Eike Lena1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre (SBiK‐F) Frankfurt am Main Germany

2. Goethe University Frankfurt, Faculty of Biological Sciences Frankfurt am Main Germany

3. Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Forest Biology Center Poznań Poland

4. Universidad Técnica Particular de Loja, Department of Biological Sciences Loja Ecuador

5. HAWK University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Faculty of Resource Management Göttingen Germany

6. University of Göttingen, Plant Ecology and Ecosystems Research Göttingen Germany

7. Universidad del Azuay, Escuela de Biología Cuenca Ecuador

8. Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Institute of Geography and Geoecology Karlsruhe Germany

Abstract

The composition of plant functional traits varies in response to environmental conditions due to processes of community assembly and species sorting. However, there is a lack of understanding of how plant trait composition responds to environmental conditions at different spatial scales and across the plant life cycle. We investigated the trait composition of leaves (specific leaf area), seeds (seed mass) and seedlings (initial seedling height) across elevations and within elevations in relation to soil and light conditions in a tropical montane forest in southern Ecuador. We surveyed traits and communities of adult trees, seeds and seedlings on nine plots at three elevations (1000–3000 m a.s.l.) and calculated community‐weighted mean trait values to analyse trait variation across and within elevations. In addition, we measured two environmental factors (soil C/N ratio and canopy openness) to quantify local‐scale variation in environmental conditions within elevations. We found that community‐weighted means of specific leaf area, seed mass and initial seedling height decreased consistently with increasing elevation. Within elevations, mean trait values of trees, seeds and seedlings responded differently to local‐scale environmental conditions. Specific leaf area decreased with increasing soil C/N ratio, and initial seedling height decreased with increasing canopy openness. Seed mass was associated neither with soil nor with light conditions. Our findings show that broad‐scale and local‐scale processes differently shape the composition of leaf, seed and seedling traits in tropical forests, indicating a scale‐dependence in trait–environment associations. Furthermore, plant traits corresponding to different life stages were related differently to environmental conditions within elevations. Community assembly processes may therefore lead to differences in species sorting at early and late plant life stages.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference92 articles.

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