Tropical tree height and crown allometries for the Barro Colorado Nature Monument, Panama: a comparison of alternative hierarchical models incorporating interspecific variation in relation to life history traits
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Published:2019-02-20
Issue:4
Volume:16
Page:847-862
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Martínez Cano IsabelORCID, Muller-Landau Helene C.ORCID, Wright S. JosephORCID, Bohlman Stephanie A., Pacala Stephen W.
Abstract
Abstract. Tree allometric relationships are widely employed for estimating forest biomass
and production and are basic building blocks of dynamic vegetation models.
In tropical forests, allometric relationships are often modeled by fitting
scale-invariant power functions to pooled data from multiple species, an
approach that fails to capture changes in scaling during ontogeny and
physical limits to maximum tree size and that ignores interspecific
differences in allometry. Here, we analyzed allometric relationships of tree
height (9884 individuals) and crown area (2425) with trunk diameter for 162
species from the Barro Colorado Nature Monument, Panama. We fit
nonlinear, hierarchical models informed by species traits –
wood density, mean sapling growth, or sapling mortality – and assessed the
performance of three alternative functional forms: the scale-invariant power
function and the saturating Weibull and generalized Michaelis–Menten (gMM)
functions. The relationship of tree height with trunk diameter was best fit
by a saturating gMM model in which variation in allometric parameters was
related to interspecific differences in sapling growth rates, a measure of
regeneration light demand. Light-demanding species attained taller heights at
comparatively smaller diameters as juveniles and had shorter asymptotic
heights at larger diameters as adults. The relationship of crown area with
trunk diameter was best fit by a power function model incorporating a weak
positive relationship between crown area and species-specific wood density.
The use of saturating functional forms and the incorporation of functional
traits in tree allometric models is a promising approach for improving estimates
of forest biomass and productivity. Our results provide an improved basis for
parameterizing tropical plant functional types in vegetation models.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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