Maximum size distributions in tropical forest communities: relationships with rainfall and disturbance

The diversity and structure of communities are partly determined by how species partition resource gradients. Plant size is an important indicator of species position along the vertical light gradient in the vegetation. Here, we compared the size distribution of tree species in 44 Ghanaian tropical...

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Main Authors: Poorter, L., Hawthorne, W., Bongers, F., Sheil, Douglas
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Wiley 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19844
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author Poorter, L.
Hawthorne, W.
Bongers, F.
Sheil, Douglas
author_browse Bongers, F.
Hawthorne, W.
Poorter, L.
Sheil, Douglas
author_facet Poorter, L.
Hawthorne, W.
Bongers, F.
Sheil, Douglas
author_sort Poorter, L.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The diversity and structure of communities are partly determined by how species partition resource gradients. Plant size is an important indicator of species position along the vertical light gradient in the vegetation. Here, we compared the size distribution of tree species in 44 Ghanaian tropical forest communities, using data from 880 one‐hectare plots and over 118 000 trees belonging to more than 210 species. The size distribution of forest species showed a continuous normal or log‐normal distribution, with many canopy species and a few large species, and varied from community to community. Multiple regression showed that this variation is related to rainfall and to disturbance. Size distributions in wet forests were less skewed than those in dry forests, with a smaller proportion of big species and a smaller size range. At the same time they exhibited tighter species packing, resulting in higher species richness. Communities with high disturbance have less species packing and lower species richness. Synthesis. We conclude that the factors that constrain organism size and species coexistence in these tropical forest tree communities differ from those known to operate on a number of well‐studied animal communities.The diversity and structure of communities are partly determined by how species partition resource gradients. Plant size is an important indicator of species position along the vertical light gradient in the vegetation.Here, we compared the size distribution of tree species in 44 Ghanaian tropical forest communities, using data from 880 one‐hectare plots and over 118 000 trees belonging to more than 210 species.The size distribution of forest species showed a continuous normal or log‐normal distribution, with many canopy species and a few large species, and varied from community to community. Multiple regression showed that this variation is related to rainfall and to disturbance.Size distributions in wet forests were less skewed than those in dry forests, with a smaller proportion of big species and a smaller size range. At the same time they exhibited tighter species packing, resulting in higher species richness. Communities with high disturbance have less species packing and lower species richness.Synthesis. We conclude that the factors that constrain organism size and species coexistence in these tropical forest tree communities differ from those known to operate on a number of well‐studied animal communities.
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spelling CGSpace198442024-08-27T10:35:37Z Maximum size distributions in tropical forest communities: relationships with rainfall and disturbance Poorter, L. Hawthorne, W. Bongers, F. Sheil, Douglas tropical forests species richness forest trees The diversity and structure of communities are partly determined by how species partition resource gradients. Plant size is an important indicator of species position along the vertical light gradient in the vegetation. Here, we compared the size distribution of tree species in 44 Ghanaian tropical forest communities, using data from 880 one‐hectare plots and over 118 000 trees belonging to more than 210 species. The size distribution of forest species showed a continuous normal or log‐normal distribution, with many canopy species and a few large species, and varied from community to community. Multiple regression showed that this variation is related to rainfall and to disturbance. Size distributions in wet forests were less skewed than those in dry forests, with a smaller proportion of big species and a smaller size range. At the same time they exhibited tighter species packing, resulting in higher species richness. Communities with high disturbance have less species packing and lower species richness. Synthesis. We conclude that the factors that constrain organism size and species coexistence in these tropical forest tree communities differ from those known to operate on a number of well‐studied animal communities.The diversity and structure of communities are partly determined by how species partition resource gradients. Plant size is an important indicator of species position along the vertical light gradient in the vegetation.Here, we compared the size distribution of tree species in 44 Ghanaian tropical forest communities, using data from 880 one‐hectare plots and over 118 000 trees belonging to more than 210 species.The size distribution of forest species showed a continuous normal or log‐normal distribution, with many canopy species and a few large species, and varied from community to community. Multiple regression showed that this variation is related to rainfall and to disturbance.Size distributions in wet forests were less skewed than those in dry forests, with a smaller proportion of big species and a smaller size range. At the same time they exhibited tighter species packing, resulting in higher species richness. Communities with high disturbance have less species packing and lower species richness.Synthesis. We conclude that the factors that constrain organism size and species coexistence in these tropical forest tree communities differ from those known to operate on a number of well‐studied animal communities. 2008 2012-06-04T09:12:47Z 2012-06-04T09:12:47Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19844 en Limited Access Wiley Poorter, L., Hawthorne, W., Bongers, F., Sheil, D. 2008. Maximum size distributions in tropical forest communities: relationships with rainfall and disturbance . Journal of Ecology [early online] doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2008.01366.x ISSN: 0022-0477.
spellingShingle tropical forests
species richness
forest trees
Poorter, L.
Hawthorne, W.
Bongers, F.
Sheil, Douglas
Maximum size distributions in tropical forest communities: relationships with rainfall and disturbance
title Maximum size distributions in tropical forest communities: relationships with rainfall and disturbance
title_full Maximum size distributions in tropical forest communities: relationships with rainfall and disturbance
title_fullStr Maximum size distributions in tropical forest communities: relationships with rainfall and disturbance
title_full_unstemmed Maximum size distributions in tropical forest communities: relationships with rainfall and disturbance
title_short Maximum size distributions in tropical forest communities: relationships with rainfall and disturbance
title_sort maximum size distributions in tropical forest communities relationships with rainfall and disturbance
topic tropical forests
species richness
forest trees
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19844
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AT sheildouglas maximumsizedistributionsintropicalforestcommunitiesrelationshipswithrainfallanddisturbance