Effects of tree sex, maturity, local abiotic, and biotic neighborhoods on the growth of a subtropical dioecious tree species Diospyros morrisiana

Author:

He Qing1ORCID,Queenborough Simon A.2ORCID,Zhang Yonghua3ORCID,Wang Weitao1,Li Buhang1ORCID,Zhao Kangning4ORCID,Luo Wenqi1ORCID,Tang Hui1,Lin Wei1ORCID,Chu Chengjin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Biocontrol, School of Life Sciences and School of Ecology Sun Yat‐sen University Guangzhou 510275 China

2. Yale School of the Environment Yale University New Haven Connecticut 06511 USA

3. College of Life and Environmental Sciences Wenzhou University Wenzhou 325000 China

4. School of Architecture University of South China Hengyang 421001 Hunan China

Abstract

AbstractPremiseUnderstanding the drivers of the growth in long‐lived woody trees is the key to predicting their responses to and maintaining their populations under global change. However, the role of tree sex and differential investment to reproduction are often not considered in models of individual tree growth, despite many gymnosperm and angiosperm species having separate male and female sexes. Thus, better models of tree growth should include tree sex and life stage along with the abiotic and biotic neighborhoods.MethodsWe used a sex‐specific molecular marker to determine the sex of 2188 individual trees >1 cm DBH of the dioecious tree species Diospyros morrisiana in a 50‐ha subtropical forest plot in China. We used long‐term census data from about 300,000 trees, together with 625 soil samples and 2352 hemispherical photographs to characterize the spatially explicit biotic and abiotic neighborhoods.ResultsWe found a male‐biased effective sex ratio and a female‐biased overall population sex ratio of D. morrisiana. No sex spatial segregation was detected for the overall population, mature, or immature trees. Immature trees grew faster than mature trees and females grew slower than males. Further, conspecific neighbors significantly decreased tree growth, while the abiotic neighborhood showed no significant effect.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that variation in resource allocation patterns within and across individual trees of different sexes and life‐history stages should be more widely accounted for in models of tree growth. In addition, our study highlights the importance of sex‐specific molecular markers for studying populations of long‐lived dioecious tree species.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

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

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