Intraspecific transitioning of ecological strategies in Pinus massoniana trees across restoration stages

Author:

Lu Sihang12ORCID,Wang Jiazheng34,Liu Ao12,Lei Feiya12,Liu Rong5,Li Shouzhong12

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Geography Fujian Normal University Fuzhou China

2. School of Geographical Sciences Fujian Normal University Fuzhou China

3. State Key Laboratory of Grassland Agro‐ecosystems, College of Ecology Lanzhou University Lanzhou China

4. Yuzhong Mountain Ecosystems Observation and Research Station Lanzhou University Lanzhou China

5. Systems Ecology, Department of Ecological Science VU University Amsterdam The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractIntraspecific variation in plant functional traits and ecological strategies is typically overlooked in most studies despite its pivotal role at the local scales and along short environmental gradients. While CSR theory has been used to classify ecological strategies (competitive C; stress‐tolerant, S; ruderal, R) in different plant species, its ability to explain intraspecific variation in ecological strategies remains uncertain. Here, we sought to investigate intraspecific variation in ecological strategies for Pinus massoniana, a pioneer conifer tree for ecological restoration in Changting County, southeast China. By measuring key leaf traits and canopy height of 252 individuals at different ontogenetic stages from three plots spanning distinctive stages along early ecological restoration and calculating their C, S, and R scores, we constructed an intraspecific CSR system. All individual strategies shifted across three restoration stages, with adults from higher S component to higher C component while juveniles from higher S component to higher R component. Our results suggest that while strategies of all P. massoniana individuals start with tolerance to environmental stress, as restoration proceeds, adult transition towards completion for light, whereas juveniles shift to an acquisitive resource use. The study reveals an intraspecific pattern of strategy variation during forest restoration, contributing to our understanding of how plants adapt to diverse environments.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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