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  • Luke Browne
    Yale School of Forestry
  • Lars Markesteijn
    Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, MadridSmithsonian Tropical Research Institute
  • Eric Manzané-Pinzón
    Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
  • S. Joseph Wright
    Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
  • Robert Bagchi
    University of Connecticut
  • Bettina Engelbrecht
    University of Bayreuth
  • F. Andrew Jones
    Oregon State University
  • Liza S. Comita
    Yale School of Forestry
A fundamental assumption of functional ecology is that functional traits are related to interspecific variation in performance. However, the relationship between functional traits and performance is often weak or uncertain, especially for plants. A potential explanation for this inconsistency is that the relationship between functional traits and vital rates (e.g., growth and mortality) is dependent on local environmental conditions, which would lead to variation in trait-rate relationships across environmental gradients. In this study, we examined trait-rate relationships for six functional traits (seed mass, wood density, maximum height, leaf mass per area, leaf area, and leaf dry matter content) using long-term data on seedling growth and survival of woody plant species from eight forest sites spanning a pronounced precipitation and soil phosphorus gradient in central Panama. For all traits considered except for leaf mass per area-mortality, leaf mass per area-growth, and leaf area-mortality relationships, we found widespread variation in the strength of trait-rate relationships across sites. For some traits, trait-rate relationships showed no overall trend but displayed wide site-to-site variation. In a small subset of cases, variation in trait-rate relationships were explained by soil phosphorus availability. Our results demonstrate that environmental gradients have the potential to influence how functional traits are related to growth and mortality rates, though much variation remains to be explained. Accounting for site-to-site variation may help resolve a fundamental issue in trait-based ecology - that traits are often weakly related to performance - and improve the utility of functional traits for explaining key ecological and evolutionary processes.

Keywords

  • forest dynamics, Panama, rainfall gradient, soil nutrients, tropics
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)248-260
Number of pages13
JournalFunctional Ecology
Volume37
Issue number2
Early online date26 Oct 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2023

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