Successional shifts in tree demographic strategies in wet and dry
Neotropical forests
- Nadja Rüger,
- Markus Schorn,
- Stephan Kambach,
- Robin L. Chazdon,
- Caroline Farrior,
- Jorge Meave,
- Rodrigo Muñoz,
- Michiel van Breugel,
- Lucy Amissah,
- Frans Bongers,
- Dylan Craven,
- Bruno Hérault,
- Catarina Jakovac,
- Natalia Norden,
- Lourens Poorter,
- Masha van der Sande,
- Christian Wirth,
- Diego Delgado,
- Daisy Dent,
- Saara DeWalt,
- Juan Manuel Dupuy-Rada,
- Bryan Finegan,
- Jefferson Hall,
- José L. Hernández-Stefanoni,
- Omar Lopez
Nadja Rüger
German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig
Corresponding Author:nadja.rueger@idiv.de
Author ProfileStephan Kambach
Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg
Author ProfileNatalia Norden
Instituto de Investigación de Recursos Biológicos Alexander von Humboldt
Author ProfileChristian Wirth
Leipzig University Faculty of Life Sciences
Author ProfileJuan Manuel Dupuy-Rada
Centro de Investigación Científica de Yucatán
Author ProfileBryan Finegan
Centro Agronómico Tropical de Investigación y Enseñanza
Author ProfileJosé L. Hernández-Stefanoni
Centro de Investigación Científica de Yucatán
Author ProfileAbstract
Tropical forest succession and associated changes in community
composition are driven by species' demographic rates, but how
demographic strategies shift during succession remains unclear. To
identify generalities in demographic trade-offs and successional shifts
in demographic strategies, we quantified demographic rates of 787 tree
species from two wet and two dry Neotropical forests. Across all
forests, we found two demographic trade-offs -- the growth--survival and
the stature--recruitment trade-off -- enabling the data-driven
assignment of species to five demographic strategies. Fast species
dominated early in succession and were then replaced by long-lived
pioneers in three forests. Intermediate and slow species increased in
basal area over succession but in contrast to the current conceptual
model, long-lived pioneers continued to dominate until the old-growth
stage in all forests. The basal area of short-lived breeders was low
across all successional stages. These results increase the mechanistic
understanding and predictability of Neotropical forest succession.Jun 2023Published in Global Ecology and Biogeography volume 32 issue 6 on pages 1002-1014. 10.1111/geb.13669