Light and competition gradients fail to explain the coexistence of shade-tolerant [i]Fagus sylvatica[/i] and shade-intermediate [i]Quercus petraea[/i] seedlings - Archive ouverte HAL Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Annals of Botany Année : 2013

Light and competition gradients fail to explain the coexistence of shade-tolerant [i]Fagus sylvatica[/i] and shade-intermediate [i]Quercus petraea[/i] seedlings

Résumé

The coexistence of forest tree species has often been linked to differences among species in terms of their response to light availability during the regeneration stage. From this perspective, species coexistence results from growthgrowth or mortalitygrowth trade-offs along spatial light gradients. Experimental evidence of growthgrowth trade-offs in natural conditions is sparse due to various confounding factors that potentially hinder the relationship. This study examined growth hierarchies along light gradients between two tree species with contrasting shade tolerance by controlling potential confounding factors such as seedling size, seedling status, seedling density and species composition. Natural regenerated shade-tolerant Fagus sylvatica and shade-intermediate Quercus petraea seedlings were used, and growth rankings over a 4-year period were compared in 8- to 10-year-old tree seedlings. No rank reversal occurs between the two species along the light gradient, or along the density, mixture or seedling size gradients. The shade-tolerant species was always the more competitive of the two. Pronounced effects of initial size on seedling growth were observed, whereas the effects of light and competition by neighbours were of secondary importance. The paramount effect of size, which results from the asymmetric nature of interseedling competition, gives a strong advantage to tall seedlings over the long term. This study extends previous efforts to identify potential drivers of rank reversals in young tree mixtures. It does not support the classical assumption that spatial heterogeneity in canopy opening explains the coexistence of the two species studied. It suggests that spatial variation in local size hierarchies among seedlings that may be caused by seedling emergence time or seedling initial performance is the main driver of the dynamics of these mixed stands.

Dates et versions

hal-01195069 , version 1 (07-09-2015)

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Citer

Rosalinde van Couwenberghe, Jean-Claude Gégout, Catherine Collet. Light and competition gradients fail to explain the coexistence of shade-tolerant [i]Fagus sylvatica[/i] and shade-intermediate [i]Quercus petraea[/i] seedlings. Annals of Botany, 2013, 112 (7), pp.1421-1430. ⟨10.1093/aob/mct200⟩. ⟨hal-01195069⟩
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